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                    <text>1 ½ Cambridge Street, Salem

According to available evidence, the earliest part of this house was built c.1740
for Samuel Curwen, merchant, as his shop. In 1760 the shop was moved back
from its street-front site (312 Essex Street) and became the storehouse (rear ell)
attached to Mr. Curwen's new house. Over the years, Mr. Curwen's house was
much-modified, if not entirely rebuilt; and this early (c.1740) section became
part of a larger rear ell, which served the owners of the main house, one of
whom was Nathaniel Bowditch in the years 1811-1823. The early and later ell,
or most of it, was detached from the house and moved here in 1946.

Samuel Curwen (1715-1802) was born in Salem on 17 December 1715, the second
son ofRev. George Curwen (1683-1717), Harvard 1701, minister ofSalem's First
Church. The baby's paternal grandfather, Jonathan Curwen (1640-1718), was living
at the time ofSamuel's birth. Jonathan was. a prominent merchant and magistrate of
Salem who had been a judge at the infamous witchcraft hearings in 1692. Ofhis
nine siblings, the Rev. George Curwen had only one who survived childhood: an
older sister, Elizabeth, Mrs. James Lindall; and he had half-brothers, Henry and
Robert Gibbs, sons ofthe first marriage ofGeorge's mother, Elizabeth (Sheafe)
Curwen (1650?-1718).
The infant Samuel Curwen's mother was Mehitable (Parkman) Curwen (16881718), the only surviving child ofa merchant, Deliverance Parkman (d. 1715) and
his wife, Susannah (Clarke) Parkman, who would die on 19 Feb. 1727/8. The
Parkman house stood on the east comer ofEssex and North Streets.
At the age of34, Rev. George Curwen died on 23 Nov. 1717, leaving his very
pregnant wife Mehitable, 29, and two little sons, Jonathan and Samuel. Less than
two weeks later, on 4 Dec. 1717, Mehitable gave birth to a baby son whom she
named George-this is a "posthumous" child, so called because born after the death
of the father. In July and August, 1718, the senior Curwens, Mr. &amp; Mrs. Jonathan &amp;
Elizabeth Curwen, died at the ages of78 and about 68, respectively. The season of
death was not over for the family-, as little Jonathan Curwen died on 6 Nov. 1718,
aged five; and his mother, Mehitable (Parkman) Curwen, 30, died one week later,
making orphans ofSamuel, almost three, and the infant George. All ofthe Parkman
wealth, and much ofthe Curwen wealth, suddenly descended to these two small
children. Oftheir immediately families, only their maternal grandmother, Susat1nah
(Clarke) Parkman, survived to look after them. She would live on for more than
nme years.

I

�In the matter of the estate of Hon. Jonathan Curwen (#6948), the inventory of28
Feb. 1718/19 valued the "homestead house barn &amp; land and cottage rights at 600 li,
pasture land where tomb is at 200 li, and two ten-acre lots in North Field, 200 li."
· His wife Elizabeth had devised her property to her son Rev. Henry Gibbs, to the
children of her deceased son Robert Gibbs, and to the children of her son Rev.
George "Corwin."
In the matter of the double estate-of Rev. George &amp; Mehitable Curwen, Samuel
Browne was administrator; and in the inventory of 16 July 1719 the extremely
valuable real estate, described only as "housing &amp; lands," was appraised at 1576 li,
and the personal estate at 937 li (#6945).
The two little orphaned Curwen boys were raised under an informal arrangement in
some prominent Salem family, with their grandmother Parkman supervising, and
administrator Samuel Browne evidently managing the property. Old Mrs. Parkman
died on 19 Feb. 1729. In January, 1731/2, the teen-aged Curwen brothers, Samuel
and George, petitioned the Court to appoint Benjamin Lynde Jr., Esq., their guardian
(see probate book 319:66). The Court decided to place them under the joint
guardianship of Thomas Barton, an apothecary, and Benjamin Lynde Jr., Esq., on 6
. Dec. 1732 (see probate books 317--:85, 319:458). The guardians managed the
Curwen property well, and saw to the education of the Curwen boys. Samuel was
sent to Harvard in the fall of 1731, aged 14; and he graduated in 1735. He began
studies for the ministry, but poor health distracted him, and an unhappy love-affair
led him to spend time abroad. By 1736 Samuel, 21, and George, 19, were deemed
old enough to take possession of their property.
In 1736, Samuel &amp; George Curwen, "Salem gentlemen," for 95 li sold to William
Browne and others the wharf and buildings on the South River that had belonged to
their grandfather Park.man (ED 76:8). In 1737 Samuel Curwen, Salem gentleman,
for 90 Ii sold to William Browne, merchant, five rights in Salem's common lands
(ED 74:142). And in 1738 Samuel Curwen, gentleman, for 50 shillings sold to his
cousins, Mary &amp; Elizabeth Lindall, his right in land to the rear of the homestead of
their mutual grandfather Judge Jonathan Curwen (ED 77:63).
Judge Curwen had left only two surviving heirs: daughter Elizabeth (Curwen)
Lindall (mother of Elizabeth &amp; Mary Lindall), and son Rev. George Curwen (father
· of Samuel &amp; George). By 1740 tlie four heirs agreed to a division of the Jonathan
Curwen homestead, which consisted of land fronting on the main street (modem
Essex Street), and running all the way back to the North River, bounding easterly on

North Street, with warehouses and barns thereon, as well as the mansion house at the

�comer of North Street. To the Lindalls went the western-most part of the homestead
land. The easterly part, with the house thereon, was divided between Samuel and
George on 27 October 1740 (ED_:122). To Samuel Curwen, Salem gentleman,
went the "middle division of my grandfather's homestead," bounded 48' on the main
street, westerly 24.5 poles (404') on the Lindalls' land, northerly on land of the
Lindalls 110' 8", easterly on the lane 14 poles 7' (228'), southerly on land of George
Curwen 65' 4", easterly on George Curwen land about 192' (11 poles, 10' 4").
George also released to Samuel his rights in three other parcels, some of them
nearby. For his part, Samuel ceded to George all of his rights in the Jonathan
Curwen house and its land, at the comer of the two streets-the house known today
as "the Witch House."
Samuel Curwen, 25 in 17 40, was not married and had evidently not settled into the
business of a merchant. Merchants owned ships and sent them and their cargoes
overseas to trade for goods more valuable than those they began with, and then sold
those goods at other ports or back in Salem.
Salem's only reliable export was salt cod, which was caught far offshore and then
"cured" until it was hard and dry and could be shipped long distances. This was a
staple food in Catholic Europe (Spain and Portugal especially) and also in the
Caribbean, where it was fed to slaves. To Europe went the "merchantable" cod
(high-grade), and to the Caribbean went the "refuse" cod (low quality). Either sort,
put into a pot of boiling water, w0uld turn into nutritious food. Lumber, horses, and
foodstuffs were also sent to the Caribbean, whence came sugar, molasses, cotton,
and mahogany. From Europe came back finished goods, wine, fruit, feathers, and
leather. There was also some trade between Salem and the Chesapeake Bay area,
which provided corm, wheat, and tobacco, while South Carolina provided rice.
Most merchant vessels were small, under 60 tons. Timothy Orne was the leading
merchant of the 1730s and 1740s, followed by his protege, Richard Derby (17121783). Up until the time of the Revolution (1775), Salem's trade was prosperous but
modest. The salt water (South River) came in along modem Derby and New Derby
Streets all the way to the present post office; and in this secure inner harbor were
most of the wharves and warehouses.
The fact that Samuel was tenned a "gentleman" and not a "merchant" tends to
indicate that he had not engaged in trade in a big way. Nonetheless, he may have
had a store at this time, where he sold imported goods acquired on "adventures"the exchange of a partial cargo for ce1iain other goods that made up part of the return
·cargo. It could be that by 1740 he-had a store here on this land, or even that it was

�here in the 1730s (the inventorie~ of his grandparents and parents are not specific
about what buildings stood on the Corwin/Curwen homestead by 1718). We do
know that there was a store here by 1759; and the architectural evidence indicates
that the store's frame was made up of wood that was dressed for construction before
1730, since it is chamfered. The chamfers, however, do not have "stops" at the
intersections of beams and posts, as they would if the framing elements had been
assembled new for the shop; and so it would appear that the store's frame was
recycled from pieces of an earlier, larger building that had been taken down.
As others would note later, Samuel Curwen was a very thin, very irritable person
. who was not very sociable. After-a while he left Salem again: in 1744, aged 29, he
secured a commission as a Captain and joined the British-led expedition against
Louisburg, the French fortress at the tip of Cape Breton, Nova Scotia. His brother
George, who was married and had children, also participated as an officer. It is
possible that Samuel resided with brother George while living in Salem.
After his military service, Capt. Samuel Curwen returned to Salem. He won
. appointment as a County impost officer, and would later become an admiralty court
judge. Well past the age of thirty he was a bachelor, if not a hardened bachelor; but
then he courted Abigail Russell, of Charlestown, who was likely a descendant of
Samuel's great-aunt Abigail Corwin, who had married James Russell of Boston.
Unhappily, Samuel's courtship of the young lady proved successful and they
married in 1750, when he was 34. It was a disastrous match.
Where the couple resided in the 1750s is not known. They evidently had no
children, and had no "need" to build a new house. By the end of the 1750s, Samuel
had established himself in trade, a~ well as in office-holding, and was ready to build
·a residence. At that time, 1759, he and his wife resided in a suite in the house of his
cousin, Mary Lindall, at 314 Essex Street.
In June, 1759, he began planning the construction of his house. From the account
book that he kept, it is clear that he served as the general contractor; and he may
have been the architect as well. In December, 1759, he agreed with Miles Ward 3d
to be the supplier of window frames and sashes. On 11 Jan. 1760 he agreed with
·Abraham Redington, Boxford housewright, to make the frame for the house, which
was to be 36' wide and 22' deep, with 10' stud (height of one story) and a hipped
roof sloping 9.5' in from each end toward the ridge, with deep joists, and summer
beams 9.5" deep, "as per draught." There was, then, a draft, or plan of the house, or
at least of its framing. Redington was to deliver the frame by May 1, 1760, "on the
spot whereon my shop now stands." Curwen hired Gideon Foster as the cellar

�mason, and Joseph Mcintire and Samuel "Liscomb" to make six window shutters of
four leaves each, and to supply doors with raised panels on both sides but not with
quarter rounds on both sides. Mr. Boyce was to supply the cellar rocks. On March
12, anticipating that he would be moving his shop off the new site of the housecellar, Samuel Curwen asked Mr. Gerrish to rent him a shop for 3-4 months. The
Gerrish shop probably stood on Norman Street, near the South River; Mr. Gerrish
did not answer him right away, but did finally agree to the lease.
Mr. Curwen acquired "stair banisters" (from Edmund Whittemore) and timber (from
Jonathan Mansfield). On 7-8 April 1760 he moved his "goods out of my shop;" and
on 9 April 17 60 he had the workmen "remove my shop back in order to make a store
of." By this, he probably meant that the shop, repositioned at the back of the housesite, would become a store-house for the shop, which would probably be conducted
from one of the front rooms oft~e new house. John Cox, mason, did the
underpinning for the new site of the shop building ("my store house"), and Nathaniel
Reeves and his "servant" John Deadman did the carpentry involved in finishing off
the small building once it was in place-all this in April, 1760. On April 19,
Curwen noted that S. Daland had "carted 43 barrels of flour, barrels of sugar, etc.,
from Mr. Sparhawk, to my own store." From this, it would appear that he was
something of a grocer.
The cellar-work forthe house was going forward in April under Gideon Foster, with
bricks from Mr. Page, mason-work by Mr. Foster and "Stimson" (perhaps John
Stimpson of Marblehead, a noted mason who later moved to Salem). James
Andrews worked as a carpenter. The frame was delivered late, much to Mr.
Curwen's annoyance. On May 14th "part of the frame (was) this day brought down,
four loads, nine tons." Two weeks late, on May 16, the frame was raised,
accompanied by the traditional feast: Mr. Curwen gave a dinner for 40 men.
Subsequently, he paid "house carpenters and house joiners" Nathaniel Reeves, John
Deadman, James Andrews, Samuel Shillaber, Amos Trask, Littlefield Sibley,
George Daland, Edmund Whittemore and son Joseph, Mansfield Burrill, John Ward,
Nehemiah Clough, William Lefavour, and John Warden.
On May 22, fed up with Gideon Foster, Curwen went to Ipswich and hired a new
mason, Eben Lovett. By July 4th the house was so near completion that he could
note, "began yesterday to remove the goods into the shop from Mr. Gerrish's." He
noted the purchase of white lead and oil for painting, and then of the arrival of
"Luscomb, painter." On July 28, 1760, he wrote, "We completed it and are to lodge
for the first time in new house, designing to give up the key of old house tomorrow
(Aug. 1, sent the key to Mary Lindall), after which my rent ceases to her ... "

�The house was finished, the store-house repositioned, and the shop open for
business. The Curwens, Samuel and his wife Abigail, moved in here and
participated prominently in the life of the town. In March, 1760, Samuel Cmwen,
Esq., gave to his cousin Mary Lindall a small piece of land next to her house (ED
108:258).
In the 1760s, after the taking of Canada by the British and Americans, relations
between the colonials and the British authorities cooled. The Americans deeply
resented English efforts to squeeze tax revenues out of the colonists' trade.
Although they had been under rgyal governors for two generations, they had been
allowed them to govern themselves completely at the town level by town meetings, ,
and, at the provincial level, through a legislature and Governor's council. Over
time, the Americans had come to see themselves as free people, and not as
dependents of a far-away mother country. The British authorities were surprised at
the Americans' resistance to their policies, and feared an incipient insurrection. In
1768, they sent over a small army of occupation and installed it in Boston. This was
a big mistake, for now the Ameri~ans were forced to see themselves as misbehaving
colonials, and to realize that they were not free. They did not like this picture, and
the result was greater tension and frequent street violence. The Boston Massacre
took place in March, 1770; in short order, much of Massachusetts turned openly
against the British, and the clouds of war gathered on the horizon.
Admiralty Court Judge Curwen was unhappy with British trade policy of the 1760s
and 1770s as it affected America, but did not favor an armed rebellion and believed
that his townsmen should try to work out their differences through negotiation. He
struggled to remain a member of the society he was born into, but ultimately realized
that he was a Tory, and was no longer welcome in most circles of Salem or
Massachusetts. Pre-revolutionary Salem had more than its share of Tories; but the
Sons of Liberty were in the majority. Wealthy scions of old Salem families like the
Curwens, Pickmans, and Brownes, chose to remain loyal to the King, as did many
others who had married into the merchant families. In 1774 one of the most
outspoken Salem Tories was Peter Frye, a prominent merchant and magistrate whose
wife was a Pickman. He resided in the most fashionable part of Salem, on Essex
Street just west of modern Washington Street. One night in October, Judge Frye
learned just how obnoxious he had made himself to the rebel faction: his fine house
on Essex Street was set afire, and he and his family barely escaped into the street.
Their house, and several others, going westward toward North Street, burned down.
Like other local Loyalists, Judge Curwen made arrangements to move away, if

�necessary; and that prospect was made more alluring by the likelihood that his wife,
with whom he could not get along, would stay behind.
By early 1775, there was little doubt that the war faction was in control, and that
Curwen and other neutrals and loyalists would soon have a day of reckoning: the
. Salem militia regiment had been purged of Tory officers, and Timothy Pickering,
29, who had published a book on military drill, was leading the men in their training
on the Common. One Sunday i11 February, 1775, the Revolutionary War almost
began in Salem. When everyone was in church, Col. Leslie's redcoats came ashore
in Marblehead and marched briskly on to Salem, where they hoped to seize
munitions. They came to the North Bridge, and found that its draw was up; and
soon they were surrounded by the Salem militia regiment. By agreement, the draw
was lowered, Leslie's men advanced over the bridge a short distance into North
Salem, faced about, and marched back through the South Fields and Marblehead,
whose own regiment, led by Col. Jeremiah Lee, could have slaughtered them.
Instead, the Marbleheaders fell in behind them, marching in mockery of Leslie's
Retreat as the British made their way back to Fort Beach and boarded the boats to
their transport vessel.
Two months later, the battle of Lexington &amp; Concord was fought on April l 91h,
1775, and war began. Of course no one knew how the war would end, and there was
little to indicate that the colonials _could actually defeat the King's army and navy,
· but virtually every able-bodied Salem man and boy gave himself over to the cause .
. Not Judge Curwen, now 59. He left for Philadelphia, hoping to find a pleasant place
to ride out what he thought would be a short-lived conflict; but Philadelphia was too
far-gone in rebel politics for his taste; and on May 12, 1775, he sailed for England
on a merchant ship. He went straight to London, and began keeping a journal, which
has been published and which has earned him a place in the Dictionary of
American Biography. During his ten-year absence, Samuel's wife Abigail resided
here, for at least part of the time, along with her relative Russell Wyer, whom
Samuel Curwen detested (but had let live with them), and whom he had forbade her
to allow to reside here in his absence. For her part, Mrs. Abigail Curwen,
abandoned for nine years by her husband, made what arrangements she pleased; and,
unfortunately, she feuded with her next-door neighbors, the George Curwens and
Richard Wards.
Salem's regiment participated in the siege of Boston, as George Washington took
. command of the army in Cambridge. The British left Boston in March, 1776, never
to return. Washington's army went to New York, and was pushed southward from

7

�Long Island in a series of defeats, during which Salem's Col. Timothy Pickering
became one of the General's most trusted officers, and Quartermaster General of the
army. Washington's first victory was the Battle of Trenton, on Christmas Day,
1776. Eventually most of the Salem men came home and sailed in privateers for the
rest of the war, which continued-at sea until 1783. The husband of Samuel
Curwen's favorite niece, Mehitable Curwen, was Capt. Richard Ward, an officer of
the regiment, and a leading rebel official in Salem.
Judge Samuel Curwen returned tQ Salem in 1784, squabbled with his wife, and went
· back to London. During his brief stay in Salem, he conveyed his mansion house
estate on 30 May 1785 for 1200 li (pounds sterling) to his niece, Mehitable
(Curwen) Ward, and her husband, Richard Ward, 44, the veteran officer of the
Revolution, and the father of several children (ED 143:163). Samuel's brother
George had no surviving sons by this time.
Judge Curwen eventually returned and would continue to reside in Salem,
sometimes with the Richard Wards and sometimes with their son Samuel Curwen
Ward, who agreed to change the name of one of his sons to Samuel Curwen, in order
to keep the surname alive. Judge Curwen's mmTiage to the estranged Abigail
Russell officially ended with her death in 1793. Now, at 78, Samuel enjoyed his
freedom, and became quite a sociable old man, gadding about in the streets of the
town dressed in his old-fashioned nabob's togs. He made a fast friend in Rev.
William Bentley, another well-known figure on the streets of Salem, who also kept a
diary .
. Samuel Curwen died on 9 April 1802, in his 8ih year.

As of 1785, the owner of the house was Richard Ward, born in Salem in 1741, the
son of Joshua Ward. In 1762 he had married Mehitable Curwen, the daughter of
Samuel's brother George Curwen, owner of the old Curwen house at the comer of
Essex and North Streets (the "Witch House"), which, by then, had been enlarged
under a deep gambrel roof. George Curwen had married Sarah Pickman in 1738,
and they had a son George Jr. in 1739, Mehitable in 1741, and Sarah in 1743.
George Curwen Jr., a mariner, was lost at sea in January, 1761, aged 21 years; and
Sarah Curwen would die unmarried in 1774, aged thirty. Therefore, Mrs. Mehitable
(Curwen) Ward was the only me~ber of her generation to survive, marry, and have
· children.

�Richard Ward (1741-1824), son of Joshua Ward &amp; Sarah Trevett, died 1824. Hem.
8 Nov. 1764 Mehitable Curwen-(l 741-1813), d/o George Curwen &amp; Sarah
Pickman, died 1813. Known issue, surname Ward:
1. George Curwen, 1765, m. 1786 Abigail Elkins; res. NH; issue.
2. Samuel Curwen, 1767, m. 1790 Jane Ropes, m/2 1807 Malvina Glover.
3. Sarah, 1769, m. 1793 James Cushing
4. Mehitable, 1771, died 1807.
5. Elizabeth, 1774, died 1834.

Before 1785, the Richard Ward family evidently resided in the old Curwen house,
with Mehitable's sister Sarah and mother Mrs. Sarah (Pickman) Curwen, who would
live until 1813. Richard Ward, evidently a merchant, was an ardent patriot before
the Revolution, served on the Salem Committee of Safety &amp; Protection throughout
the war, and superintended construction of the fort at Salem Neck, named Fort Lee,
for Gen. Charles Lee, under whom he had served. Ward had marched with the
Salem regiment to the battles of Lexington &amp; Concord and Bunker Hill; but in both
cases they were just too late to participate.
· On 6 June 1776, Richard Ward, 35, had been commissioned Captain of the Third
Company of the First Essex Regiment, under Col. Timothy Pickering Jr. (17451829). He fought with the regiment in New York and New Jersey, and at the end of
1776 returned to Salem to help his wife, then in poor health, to care for their
children. After the war, he was active in local politics, and was elected a state
legislator as well as an acting judge and a selectman. He was an anti-Federalist
(Jeffersonian Democratic-Republican) in politics, and "possessed great firmness and
equanimity of temper, (with a) suavity of manners and obliging disposition (that)
endeared him to all."
(Much of the Richard Ward information comes from the sketch, pp. 669-670, in
G.A. Ward's 1864 edition of Journal &amp; Letters of Samuel Curwen)
Evidently the post-war period was not a boom time for Richard Ward; for on 13 Oct.
1789 Richard &amp; Mehitable Ward for 500 Ii mortgaged their homestead here to
Thomas Russell Esq. of Boston (EP 150:200). Thomas Russell was the very
wealthy brother of their aunt, Mrs. Samuel (Abigail Russell) Curwen, and was,
evidently, a descendant of Mehitable's great-grandfather Curwen. The 500 Ii was
probably used to give Richard Ward and his sons, George, Samuel, and Richard, a
stake in Salem's new foreign commerce.

�Richard Ward (1741-1824), born 5 April 1741, son of Joshua Ward &amp; Sarah
Trevett, died 4 Nov. 1824. He m;-1764 Mehitable Curwen (1741-1813), d/o George
Curwen &amp; Sarah Pickman, died 4 April 1813. Known issue:
1. George Curwen, 1765, m. 1786 Abigail Elkins; res. NH.
2. Samuel Curwen, 1767, mil Jane Ropes, m/2 1807 Malvina Glover.
3. Sarah, 1769, m. Jam es Cushing
4. Mehitable, 1771, d. 1807.
5. Elizabeth, 1774, died 1834.
6. Richard, 1776, m. 1805 Lydia Robinson
7. Martha, 1779, m. Charles Adams.
8. Daniel, 1782, d. 1813.

In some places, the post-war loss of the former colonial connections and trade routes
was devastating; but in Salem, the merchants were ready to push their ships and
cargoes into all parts of the known world. Shut out of all British and British colonial
ports, Hasket Derby, William Gray, Eben Beckford, and Joseph Peabody led the
effort to open new markets. In 1784, Derby began trade with Saint Petersburg,
Russia; and in 1784 and 1785 he dispatched trading vessels to Africa and China,
respectively. Voyages to India soon followed, and (sent by Beckford, of 14 Lynde
Street) to the Spice and Pepper Islands (Sumatra, Java, Malaya, etc.). In 1798 trade
opened with Mocha, Arabia, which supplied coffee. The size and number of vessels
was increased, and by 1800 Salem was the greatest worldwide trading port in
America, with some of the wealthiest merchants. It was at this time (1792) that
Salem's first bank was founded: the Essex Bank would be followed by the Salem
Bank (1803).
Throughout the 1790s the Richard Wards resided here. The Wards' second son,
Samuel Curwen Ward, born in 17 67, certainly had his share of ambition. In 1790 he
married the girl almost-next-door, Jane Ropes, also 23, the daughter of the late Judge
Nathaniel Ropes (owner of the present "Ropes Memorial") and of Priscilla
·(Sparhawk) Ropes, who would die in 1798. In 1790, per the census (p.93, col. 1),
this house was occupied by the family headed by Richard Ward (himself and three
males over 16, two males under 16, six females, and two free blacks) and perhaps by
. the family headed by Henry Gardner (himself, five females, and one free black). In
marrying Jane Ropes, S. Curwen Ward became kinsman to a very prominent group
of young merchants: Nathaniel Ropes (Jr.) (1759-1806) was married to Sarah
Putnam (and lived in the "Ropes Memorial" in 1790, per census, p. 93, col. 1), John
Ropes ( 17 63-1828) was married to Hannah Harraden (and lived in the Harraden
house on Charter Street), Abigail Ropes was married to William Orne, and Elizabeth

IO

�Ropes (b. 1764) was married to Jonathan Hodges. All of these men were merchants,
and many of their in-law connections were merchants or shipmasters.
Samuel Curwen Ward and his bride Jane Ropes evidently set up housekeeping on
the westerly side of lower Liberty Street, near the Burying Point, which was then the
town's waterfront. Their house, which came with its own wharf, was owned by
Richard Ward, and had been the-home of his father, Joshua Ward, a successful
tanner and merchant who had married into a prominent Marblehead family, the
Trevetts. On 27 March 1795 Richard Ward Esq. sold this Liberty Street homestead
for 1550 li to Samuel Curwen Ward, Salem trader (ED _:74), who was residing
there at the time. The S.C. Wards had already had three sons, one of whom died in
1795. They would have two more children before Jane's untimely death early in
1803.

Samuel Curwen Ward (1767-1817), son ofRichard Ward &amp; Mehitable Curwen,
died 26 Nov. 1817. He m/1 31 Oct. 1790 Jane Ropes (1767-1803), b. 22 Jan. 1767,
d/o Nathaniel Ropes Esq. &amp; Priscilla Sparhawk, d. 18 Jan. 1803. He m/2 1807
Malvina T. Glover (d. 1817+), d/o Benjamin Stacey Glover of Marblehead. Known
issue:
1. Samuel C, 1791, d. 1795.
2. George A., 1793, m. 1816 Mehitable Cushing.
3. Samuel C., 1795, name changed 1802 to Samuel Curwen, m. Priscilla Barr.
4. Charles, 1797, merchant, v.-1855.
5. Jane S., 1802
6. Malvina G., 1809, d. 1809.
7. William R. Lee, 1811, m. twice, resided NY &amp; Salem.
8. Henry Orne, 1816, m. 1847 Janet Buchanan; resided in Illinois.

Samuel Curwen Ward was not a merchant; he was a trader. He did not own ships
and import/export goods. He had a ship chandlery, and dealt in hardware and other
supplies for outfitting a ship and making a long voyage. As his counter-clerk and
bookkeeper, he employed a young man, Nathaniel Bowditch (born 1773), who had
worked for his brother-in-laws at Ropes &amp; Hodges; and Bowditch worked for
Curwen Ward until 1794, when he was freed from his indenture and went to sea.
There were many such businesses in Salem in the 1790s, and most of them
prospered in those boom-times (William Bentley so observed in his diary).
By the end of 1796 the S.C. Wards wished to move up from the waterfront; and his
parents, Richard and Mehitable Ward, agreed to sell him the Samuel Curwen house.

J{

�They probably moved back into the old Curwen homestead at the comer of North
Street; and on 25 Feb. 1797 Ri_chard Ward &amp; wife Mehitable sold the homestead
(312 Essex) to Samuel Curwen Ward, Salem trader, for $1,000 and agreement to pay
the mortgage held by Thomas Russell (ED 162:101).
Unfortunately, as time had gone on (and with Nathaniel Bowditch no longer in his
employ), Curwen Ward had proved to be a poor businessman. He ran his operation
deeply into the red, due to inatt~ntion and a fondness for the life of the taverns,
which was shared, to some degree, by all members of his class in Salem, a very
bibulous and convivial place in those days. On 27 Nov. 1797, Bentley noted that
"last Friday, a Sam. Curwin Ward was distrained upon by his creditors and was
obliged to shut his doors. Such events so seldom happen in Salem that they are
attended with great alarm and form the whole conversation (of the town). This
Ward has been much abroad from his family, often at the public taverns, and very
negligent of his affairs. (He) is young, but in a very embarrassed situation: the
weight of his debts falls upon his young companions, and the manner in which they
were contracted does not appear."
Since there was no immediate cure for his bankruptcy, S. Curwen Ward sold his
property. Fortunately, the buyer was his brother-in-law, Nathaniel Ropes, Salem
merchant, who bought the homestead on 16 Nov. 1797 for $1000 and Ropes'
agreement to pay the T. Russell mortgage (ED 163:8). The property was described
as being situated near the Town pump, fronting 40' on the main street, westerly on
land in the occupation of Mercy Gibbs 190', northerly on land of Nathaniel Weston
. 43', easterly 188' on land of widow Sarah Curwen and of Richard Ward and wife
Mehitable.
'Mr. Ropes was doing Mr. Ward a favor, and allowed him and his family to continue
to reside there until Mr. Ward could recover his fortune. Mr. Ward's wife Jane,
sister of the new owner, did not sign off on this deed, and so retained her dower right
in the premises. Also in November, 1797, for another $2150, Curwen Ward sold to
Nathaniel Ropes all of his other property that had not already been sold: the wharf
on Water Street that he had bought in 1795 from his father, a parcel on Federal
Street, and his pew in the Old Meeting House (ED 163:9,9,9).

Nathaniel Ropes did not long own the property, which was more entangled than he
thought. William Gray Jr., Esq., the great Salem merchant "Billy" Gray, had won a
court-claim against S.C. Ward, and the Court had levied a new lien on the S.C. Ward
property. On 6 Dec. 1797 Mr. Ropes for $2948.72 sold to Ebenezer Putnam,
gentleman, the homestead (312 Essex Street) and the wharf that he had bought from

11-

�S.C. Ward (ED 162:276). Mr. Putnam was the brother of Mr. Ropes' wife Sarah.
The house was still subject to the T. Russell mortgage and to Billy Gray's lien, but
not to Jane Ropes Ward's dower right, which she sold that same day, for $954.63, to
Mr. Putnam (ED 162:277). The S.C. Wards continued to reside here with their
children, probably with the understanding that Mr. Ebenezer Putnam would let Mr.
Ward buy the place back once he was able.
Salem was the scene of great mercantile enterprise and great national influence in
the 1790s. In the late 1790s, there was agitation in Congress to go to war with
France, which was at war with England. Pres. John Adams in 1797 sent negotiators
to France, but they were insulted. In summer, 1798, a quasi-war with France began,
much to the horror of Salem's Crowninshield family, which had an extensive trade
with the French, and whose ships and cargoes in French p01is were susceptible to
seizure. The quasi-war brought about a political split within the Salem population.
Those who favored England aligned themselves with the national Federalist party,
led by Hamilton and Salem's Timothy Pickering (the U.S. Secretary of State).
These included most of the merchants, who were eager to go to war with France, and
opposed Adams' efforts to negotiate. They were led locally by the Derby family .
. Those who, like Richard Ward, favored peace with France (and who admired the
French for overthrowing their monarchy, even while deploring the excesses of the
revolutionaries) were the Anti-Fe~eralists, who aligned with Jefferson and his
. Democratic-Republican party; they were led locally by the Crowninshield family.
For the first few years of this rivalry, Derby and the Federalists prevailed. Hasket
"King" Derby died in 1799 and his own family's power rapidly waned, but his
nephews and rivals, the five Crowninshield brothers, all shipmasters-turnedmerchants in a firm with their father, began a rapid ascent.
In 1798, Ebenezer Putnam owned this house, which was occupied by the Samuel
Curwen Ward family (see 1798 Direct Tax, listing under Ebenezer Putnam).
The non-occupant owner, Ebenezer Putnam (1769-1826), Harvard Class of 1785,
was a merchant, the son of Dr. Ebenezer Putnam &amp; Margaret Scollay. He had
married Sarah Fisk in 1791, and she died four years later in 1795; and in 1796 he
married her sister Elizabeth Fisk, who would die in 1808. Mr. Putnam had six
surviving children. His only sister-Sarah (b. 1765) had mmried Nathaniel Ropes
(Jr.); and Mr. Putnam was evidently a partner in the firm of Ropes &amp; Hodges, ship
chandlers, for he had joined them in purchasing their wharf and warehouse on
Neptune Street (on the salt water near the foot of modern Hawthorne Boulevard).
Like many others in Salem, Mr. Putnam would eventually lose his fortune due to the
combined effects of the Embargo, the War of 1812, and bad luck; but at this time he

�was a wealthy man. On 28 May 1800 for $2512. 78 Ebenezer Putnam, gentleman,
purchased the balance of the mortgage that had been held by the late Thomas
Russell.
Before long, it was apparent to Mr. Putnam that S.C. Ward would not be able to repurchase the homestead. With increasing need for his own liquidity, Mr. Putnam
found a buyer for the S.C. Ward homestead, and on 7 Nov. 1800 he sold it for $4000
to William Ward, merchant. Thereupon the Samuel Curwen Ward family moved
out, and the William Wards moved in. S. Curwen Ward's wife Jane Ropes died in
1803. He continued to struggle in life after that, but with small children to raise he
married again, in 1807, to Malvina Glover, of the prominent Marblehead family.
With her he had more children, and mended his ways somewhat, attaining solvency
and a place in Salem's economy. His son Samuel Curwen, whose surname had been
changed, founded a new family of Curwens that persisted into the 20th century. S.
Curwen Ward died in 1817, aged 50 years.
In 1800, Pres. Adams was successful in negotiating peace with France, and
thereupon fired Pickering, his oppositional Secretary of State. Salem's Federalist
merchants erupted in anger, expressed through their newspaper, the Salem Gazette.
At the same time, Britain began to harass American shipping. As with the French
earlier, Salem's seafarers added guns to their trading vessels, and the Salem owners
and masters aggressively expanded their trade to the farthest ports of the rich East,
while also maintaining their trade with the Caribbean and Europe. Salem cargoes
were exceedingly valuable, and wealth was piling up in Salem's counting houses.
The Crowninshields, led by brother Jacob, were especially successful, as their
holdings rose from three vessels iv 1800 to twelve in 1803. The greatest of the
· Salem merchants at this time was William "Billy" Gray, brother-in-law of William
Ward (their wives were sisters), the new owner of the house, who sailed as
shipmaster for Mr. Gray.
In 1800, Salem was still a town, and a small one by our standards, with a total
population of about 9,500. Its politics were fierce, as the Federalists squared off
against the Democrats. The two factions attended separate churches, held separate
parades, and supported separate s~hools, military companies, and newspapers (the
· Crowninshield-backed Impartial Register started in 1800). Salem's merchants
resided mainly on two streets: Washington and Essex (particularly between what are
now Hawthorne Boulevard and North Streets). The East Parish (Derby Street area)
was for the seafaring families, shipmasters, sailors, and fishermen. In the 1790s,
Federal Street, known as New Street, had more empty lots than fine houses.
Chestnut Street did not exist: its site was a meadow, backlands for the Pickerings on

�Broad Street and the old estates of Essex Street. The Common was not yet
Washington Square, and was covered with hillocks, small ponds and swamps, and
utility buildings and the town alms-house. In the later 19th century, Salem's
commercial prosperity would sweep almost all of the great downtown houses away
(the brick Joshua Ward house, built 1784, is a notable exception).
The town's merchants were among the wealthiest in the country, and, in Samuel
Mcintire, carver and housewright, they had a local architect who could help them
realize their desires for large and beautiful homes in the latest style. While a few of
the many new houses built in the next ten years went up in the old EssexWashington Street axis, most were erected on or near Washington Square or in the
Federalist "west end" (Chestnut, Federal, and upper Essex Streets). The
· architectural style (called "Federal" today) had been developed years before in the
Adam brothers in England and featured fanlight doorways, palladian windows,
elongated pilasters and columns,_ and large windows. It was introduced to New
England by Charles Bulfinch upon his return from England in 1790. The State
House in Boston was his first institutional composition; and soon Beacon Hill was
being built up with handsome residences in the Bulfinch manner.
Samuel Mcintire was quick to pick up on the style and adapt it to Salem's larger
lots. His first local composition, the Jerathmeel Peirce house (on Federal Street),
contrasts greatly with his later Adamesque compositions. The interiors of this Adam
style differed from the "Georgian" and Post-Colonial: in place of walls of wood
paneling, there now appeared plastered expanses painted in bright colors or covered
in bold wallpapers. The Adam style put a premium on handsome casings and
carvings of central interior features such door-caps and chimney-pieces (Mclntire's
specialty). On the exterior, the Adam style included elegant fences; and the houses
were often built of brick, with attenuated porticoes and, in the high style, string
. courses, swagged panels, and even two-story pilasters. The best example of the new
style was the Elias Hasket Derby house, co-designed by Bulfinch and Mcintire, and
built on Essex Street in 1797 (demolished in 1815), on the site of today's Town
. House Square.
As ofNovember, 1800, the owner of the homestead was William Ward, who
occupied the house with his wife Joanna and children Thomas, Lucy, and William,
with at least two more, Miles and Nancy, born here after 1800. William Ward was
not closely related to the Curwen-Wards; and his mother, a Putnam, was not closely
related to Ebenezer Putnam, from whom he purchased the property. Formerly a
shipmaster, and commander of the ship Pallas, Mr. Ward had recently he had set up
as a merchant (see EIHC 3: 175).

�William Ward (1761-1827), s/o Wm. Ward &amp; Ruth Putnam, mil 1785 Martha
Proctor (d. 1788), m/2 1790 Joanna (Nancy) Chipman. To Medford by 1816.
Known issue (per Sidney Perley), surname Ward:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.

Thomas Wren, 1786, m. 1810 Lydia Gray
Nancy
Lucy Ann, bp 1797, m. 1833 Charles Lawrence
William, bp 1799
Miles, 1801, d. unm'd.

Salem's commerce created great wealth, which in tum attracted many newcomers
from outlying towns and even other states. A new bank, the Salem Bank, was
formed in 1803, and the fierce politics and commercial rivalries continued. The
. ferment of the times is captured in the diary of Rev. William Bentley, bachelor
minister of Salem's East Church (it stood on Essex Street, near Washington Square),
and editor of the Register newspaper. Bentley's diary is full of references to the
civic and commercial doings of the town, and to the lives and behaviors of all
classes of society. On Union Street, not far from Mr. Bentley's church, on the fourth
of July, 1804, was born a boy who would grow up to eclipse all sons of Salem in the
eyes of the world: Nathaniel Hawthorne, whose father would die of fever while on a
voyage to the Caribbean in 1808. This kind of untimely death was all too typical of
Salem's young seafarers, who fell prey to malaria and other diseases of the
Caribbean and Pacific tropics.
Salem's boom came to an end with a crash in January, 1808, when Jefferson and the
Congress imposed an embargo on all American shipping in hopes of forestalling war
with Britain. The Embargo, which was widely opposed in New England, proved
futile and nearly ruinous in Salem, where commerce ceased. As a hotbed of
Democratic-Republicanism, the East Parish and its seafarers, led by the
Crowninshields, loyally supported the Embargo until it was lifted in spring, 1809.
Shunned by most of the other Salem merchants for his support of the Embargo, the
eminent Billy Gray took his large fleet of ships-fully one-fourth of Salem's
tonnage--and moved to Boston. This was a blow from which Salem never fully
recovered. Gray soon switched from the Federalist party, and was elected Lt.
Governor under Gov. Elbridge Gerry, a native of Marblehead. Diminished by many
vessels and much wealth by Gray's removal, Salem resumed its seafaring commerce
for three years, but still the British preyed on American shipping. William Ward,

\0

�merchant, was no doubt affected by all of these events, but whether for good or ill is
now unknown.
It would seem that William Ward, merchant, perhaps enlarged the Samuel Curwen
house in the first decade of the 1800s, adding a third story, a new staircase and trim,
doors, etc. Possibly he took down the Curwen house and built a new on its site. He
did not alter the old "store" out back, but probably expanded the rear ell with a new
section added to the old store seQtion. Further investigation of the present building
should indicate whether Ward remodeled the Samuel Curwen house, or rebuilt on its
site. Mr. Ward had decided to move to Boston, where he would work as the Cashier
(manager) of the State Bank; and he would die in Medford in 1827.

On 6 May 1811 William Ward, Salem merchant, for $5833.34 sold to Nathaniel
Bowditch, Salem merchant, the homestead here (ED 194:91). The land was
bounded southerly 40' on Essex Street, easterly 188' on land of Sarah Curwen and
Richard Ward Esq. and wife Mehitable (as established in a deed to William Ward of
9 Nov. 1803, 173 :86), northerly on land of Dr. John W. Treadwell, and westerly
190' on Mercy Gibbs' land, with the right to use Gibbs' land to work on the house
and the right to use a passage-way in from North Street in the rear of the land.
Nathaniel Bowditch, the famous navigator and brilliant mathematician who in 1811
headed up an insurance company, moved in here with his wife and children.

Nathaniel Bowditch (1773-1838), son of Habbakuk Bowditch and Mary Ingersoll,
. died 16 March 1838, Boston. He-mil 25 Marth 1798 Elizabeth Boardman (d.
1798), d/o Francis Boardman &amp; Mary Hodges. He m/2 28 Oct. 1800 Mary
Ingersoll (died 1834). Known issue:
1. Nathaniel I., 1805
2. Jonathan I., bp 1806
3. Henry I., 1808
4. Mary I., 1816
5. Charles I., 1810, d. 1820.
6. William I., 1819
7. Elizabeth Boardman, bp 1823

In June, 1812, war was declared against Britain.
Although Salem had opposed the war as being potentially ruinous and primarily for

the benefit of the southern and western war-hawk states, yet when war came, Salem

�swiftly fitted out 40 privateers manned by Marblehead and Salem crews, who also
served on U.S. Navy vessels, including the Constitution. Many more could have
been sent against the British, but some of the Federalist merchants held their vessels
back. In addition, Salem fielded companies of infantry and aiiillery. Salem and
Marblehead privateers were largely successful in making prizes of British supply
vessels. While many of the town's men were wounded in engagements, and some
were killed, the possible riches of privateering kept the men returning to sea as often
as possible. The first prizes were captured by a 30-ton converted fishing schooner,
the Fame, and by a 14-ton luxury yacht fitted with one gun, the Jefferson. Of all
Salem privateers, the Crowninshields' 350-ton ship America was the most
successful. She captured 30-plus prizes worth more than $1,100,000.
Salem erected forts and batteries on its Neck, to discourage the British warships that
cruised these waters. In June, 1813, off Marblehead Neck, the British frigate
Shannon defeated the U.S. Navy frigate Chesapeake. The Federalists would not
allow their churches to be used for the funeral of the Chesapeake's slain
commander, James Lawrence ("Don't give up the ship!"). Almost a year later, in
April, 1814, the people gathered along the shores of Salem Neck as three sails
appeared on the horizon and came sailing on for Salem Bay. These vessels proved
to be the mighty Constitution in the lead, pursued by the smaller British frigates
Tenedos and Endymion. The brQeze was light, and the British vessels gained, but
Old Ironsides made it safely into Marblehead Harbor, to the cheers of thousands.
On land, the war went poorly for the United States, as the British captured
Washington, DC, and burned the Capitol and the White House. Along the western
frontier, U.S. forces were successful against the weak English forces; and, as
predicted by many, the western expansionists had their day. At sea, as time wore on,
Salem's vessels often were captured, and its men imprisoned or killed. After almost
three years, the war was bleeding the town dry, and the menfolk were disappearing.
Hundreds of Salem men and boys were in British prison-ships and at Dartmoor
Prison in England. At the Hartford Convention in 1814, New England Federalist
delegates met to consider what they could do to bring the war to a close and to
restore the region's commerce. Sen. Timothy Pickering of Salem led the extreme
Federalists in proposing a series of demands which, if not met by the federal
government, could lead to New England's seceding from the United States; but the
Pickering faction was countered by Harrison G. Otis of Boston and the moderate
Federalists, who prevailed in sending a moderate message to Congress.
· At last, in February, 1815, peace was restored.

�The new owner as of 1811, Nathaniel Bowditch (1773-1838), was born in Salem on
26 March 1773 in a house near the Common on Brown Street. He was the fourth of
the seven children of Capt. Habakkuk Bowditch, a shipmaster, and his wife Mary
(Ingersoll) Bowditch. Capt. Bowditch's mother was a Turner, descended from John
Turner, builder of the so-called House of The Seven Gables and leading merchant of
17th century Salem. When Nathaniel was only 2 or 3, the family moved to what is
now Peabody, where little Nathaniel received his first schooling. They returned to
Salem when he was 5 or 6. At age seven he was enrolled in Master Watson's
school, the best in town, comer of Essex and Union Streets, which he attended for
three years, evincing such great abilities in mathematics that Master Watson accused
the boy of receiving adult help in his homework. At the age of ten he was
withdrawn from school, due to his father's straitened circumstances at the end of
eight years of war: Capt. Bowditch had lost his position as a shipmaster and had
become a cooper; and Nathaniel became his helper. Then Nathaniel's beloved
mother Mary Ingersoll Bowditch died, leaving the family bereft. Capt. Bowditch
evidently placed his sons in apprenticeships, rented a house from Benjamin
Pickman, and descended into despondent obscurity.
Daniel A. White, in "An Eulogy on the Life and Character of Nathaniel Bowditch,
LL.D., F.R.S." (Salem, 1838, Salem Gazette printing office), who knew Bowditch,
relates what happened next. "After quitting Watson's school, as we have mentioned,
and passing some time with his father, in his cooper's shop, he (Nathaniel) attended a.
number of months at Michael Welch's school, to learn book-keeping, and then, at the
age of twelve or thirteen, he entered the ship-chandlery store of Ropes &amp; Hodges,
with whom he passed several years. Upon their relinquishing the business, he
removed to the similar and extensive store of Mr. S. C. Ward, in which he remained
till he became of age, when he took his first voyage at sea. For the business, to
which he was now introduced, he had fully prepared himself, by his diligence and
activity in improving all the advantages which had fallen within his reach. He had
acquired an insatiable thirst for knowledge, and his ardent attachment to books and
study was already known. This soon became predominant and almost exclusive.
The moments of leisure, which lie found through the day, while in these stores, were
eagerly devoted to reading or study. Sometimes he exercised his philosophical
ingenuity in the way of experiments. One of his juvenile companions remembers, in
. particular, a curious sort of barometer, of his construction, while at the store of
Ropes &amp; Hodges. His diffusive kindness, too, was manifested at this early period in
imparting instruction to other poor boys. There are those, now living among
us in humble life, who speak with deep emotion of his generous efforts to teach them
useful knowledge. But, fired as his whole soul was with the love of science and
learning, such was the strength of his re solution and principles, that it was never

19

�suffered to interfere with the punctual performance of his duties. He is represented
as having made himself, by his prompt attention and pleasing manners, a general
favorite with the great variety of sea-faring people with whom he transacted
business. It is needless to add, hat he received the unbounded confidence of his
· employers. His fidelity and skill in business became so conspicuous, indeed, and
such was his reputation for sound judgment and integrity, before he left this
employment, that merchants are said to have resorted to him for the settlement of
controverted questions among them, and a better tribunal they could hardly have
found.
"He had attended no schools but those already mentioned, and, it is believed,
that after quitting them, he received no direct instruction in literature or science,
· except a few lessons, many years afterwards, in French pronunciation, having
otherwise studied the language by himself. Yet, with his inexhaustible native
resources, he had perhaps the best of all schools for him, that of nature and
necessity. He certainly had the best of teachers in himself, and the best means of
improvement in his own incomparable powers. By the admirable order and
discipline which he kept up in this, his great school, he secured to himself the
highest objects .of education, purity of life, energy of mind and character, invincible
power of application to business or study, facility and quickness in the use of his
faculties, mental vigor, practical skill, and methodical habits, together with a rich
fund of various knowledge and profound science. Yes, young Bowditch, at this
period of his greatest destitution, created for himself advantages above all, which all
the schools of the country would have given him. This he did, not merely by the
strength of his resolution and industry, his intellectual and practical talents,
&gt; extraordinary as these were, but also by the virtues of his heart, which made every
body and every thing around him tributary to his resources, uniting them to him with
all the power of attraction and the force of cohesion. The friends, whom he drew to
. himself, never forsook him; the means of improvement, which they afforded him,
became his own, if not by possession, yet by his thorough use of them, which is
better than possession; and the various treasures of learning, which he gathered,
were never lost.
"The seven or eight years, which he passed in these ship-chandlery stores, was
undoubtedly the most important period of his life, as it comprised the course of his
education, and laid the foundation of all his future eminence and usefulness. It
therefore deserves our more particular consideration. During most of the time that he
continued with Ropes &amp; Hodges, he was a boarder in the family of the latter, at the
house of the late Judge Ropes, where he had access to the valuable miscellaneous
library, left by that gentleman, containing many of the choicest works of English
literature. These, with books occasionally obtained from other souryes, became the
constant companions of his leisure hours, and he perused them with delight,

�whenever he was not engaged by his more fascinating science of numbers. An
apartment, in the upper story of the house, was the scene of his summer's labors,
while a large kitchen fire-place afforded him a commodious place
of study for his long winter evenings. Here, too, he was often to be seen in the
morning, with an infant of the family in one hand, and a book in the other, uniting
the spirit of kindness with his industry and love of knowledge.
"This early familiarity with the best English authors, accounts for his pure
English style, so remarkable in a self educated man of science, for its perspicuity and
beautiful simplicity. His love of literature and poetry, too, may be traced to the same
source. The works of Shakespeare could not fail to delight his imagination, and
enrich his mind with noble sentilnents and useful views of life; and many of this
poet's most beautiful and impressive passages were treasured up in his memory.
"But mathematics and natural philosophy were the objects of his most ardent
pursuit; and whatever books, relating to these, fell in his way, were devoured by him
with avidity. He read through the-whole of Chambers's Cyclopedia, in two large
folio volumes, without the omission of a single article. This would seem to us a
formidable undertaking; but to him it was entirely interesting, and, with his ready
comprehension and activity of mind, was accomplished by him with ease. He always
read with close attention, though rapidly, passing over nothing without
understanding it, and as his memory was remarkably retentive, he \vas, doubtless,
not a little indebted to this mass of miscellaneous reading and study, for that
extensive and various information, which sometimes surprised his learned friends,
who, being accustomed to regard him as the great mathematician, were not prepared
to find in him such a fund of general knowledge. Many of the articles in this
Cyclopaedia must have come in aid of his favorite pursuits, and increased his desire
for more extended researches.
"Soon after removing to Mr. Ward's store, he was favored with the friendship
of the Hon. Nathan Reed, who then kept an apothecary's shop in Salem, with one of
Mr. Bowditch's schoolmates as an assistant; and at this shop he used to pass his
Sunday evenings, studying with his young friend the scientific books which he there
found. Mr. Reed, himself a lover _of science, perceiving his insatiable thirst for
knowledge, offered him the free use of his books, among which were a number of
valuable works in mathematics, astronomy, and natural philosophy. This was a most
welcome privilege, and he improved it to the fullest extent. He felt the absence of
scientific books, as a great impediment in the way of prosecuting his beloved studies
to his own satisfaction. Every thing which persevering industry and labor could do,
to remove this impediment, was done by him. He copied, in whole or in part, many
of the volumes which he was able to borrow or consult, perhaps with the double
view of possessing the works, and fixing their contents more deeply in his mind.
There are now in his library twelve folio, and fourteen quarto volumes of

�manuscripts, from his own pen, i~duding several volumes of original matter, written
· at a later period. No one, without actual inspection of these volumes, can form a just
estimate of his prodigious labor and diligence in producing them. They appear to me
among the most astonishing monuments of human industry, which I ever beheld ... "
D.A. White's eulogy ofNathaniel Bowditch, written immediately after his death in
183 8 by one who knew him, gives us an excellent picture of this extraordinary man
in his youth. Among other things, it shows that he resided with the family of his coemployer, Jonathan Hodges, in the Hodges' family home, now known as the Ropes
Memorial (Mrs. Hodges was born Elizabeth Ropes at the Ropes Memorial), which
was also the boyhood home of Mr. Hodges' business partner and brother-in-law,
John Ropes. Judge Nathaniel Ropes (died 1774) had assembled an excellent library
in his short life, and it remained in the house, where Nathaniel Bowditch used it to
feed his mind. Bowditch was open to knowledge wherever he could find it: for
example, it was from Edward Dorr, employed in Retire Becket's shipyard, that he
learned the use of the Gunter's scale (EIHC 3:90).
Capt. Jonathan Hodges Jr. (1764-1837), the son of Gamaliel Hodges and Priscilla
Webb, was a trader at first, and became a merchant, and owned a distillery near his
chandlery. He was commander of the Salem Cadets, and for many years was
Treasurer of Salem. He had three sons with his wife, Elizabeth Ropes, who died in
1840 (BF Browne, EIHC 4136-7).
After he went to work for S. Curwen Ward (husband of Jane Ropes, another sister of
John Ropes), Bowditch evidently-shifted his lodgings, perhaps to the S.C. Ward
house. Mr. Ward, in 1790, may have resided here (at 312 Essex) with his father; and
he may have resided here through 1794, when Nathaniel Bowditch's apprenticeship
expired. As has been mentioned, S.C. Ward purchased his grandfather's house on
Liberty Street in 1795; and in 1797 he purchased the homestead at 312 Essex Street.
The Ropes &amp; Hodges chandlery evidently stood at the head of a wharf not far from
the foot of modem Hawthorne Boulevard; evidently it had been built on land
purchased in 1789 by Messrs. Ropes, Hodges, and Putnam, but probably leased by
them as early as 1786. In 1790 John Ropes resided on Charter Street, near the
chandlery (see 1790 census, p. 96, col. 3); and Jonathan Hodges resided nearby on
Union Street ( 1790 census, p. 97, col. 1). In those days the South River extended in
from the sea all the way to the site of today's Post Office building, and formed an
extensive inner harbor.

�While it is not within the scope of this report to trace the details of Nathaniel
Bowditch's life, it is worth noting that, per the 1800 census, he was residing on
Central Street (then called Market Street), in an apartment in a house owned by a
prosperous cabinet-maker, William Appleton (1765-1822), whose first wife was
Anna Bowditch ( 1772-1795), daughter of Eben Bowditch, and so evidently a first
cousin of Nathaniel Bowditch (BF Browne, EIHC 4:83). This house, long gone,
occupied a spot north of the Salem Bank building (Boys &amp; Girls Club), and was near
the insurance office in which Bowditch would later work. It would seem (see
below) that Bowditch resided here for at least five years (note: Harold Bowditch's
The Buildings Associated With Nathaniel Bowditch, published in EIHC 79, makes
for interesting reading. In some instances, my conclusions differ from his).
On 28 October 1800, Nathaniel Bowditch married his first cousin Mary Ingersoll.
At that time, he was a mariner, and frequently was away from Salem at sea. B.F.
Browne "thought" that Bowditch may have resided in the Francis Boardman house
at 82 Washington Square East, but it s~ems more likely that Browne was recalling
Bowditch's having resided there with his first wife, Elizabeth Boardman, who died
in 1798. In 1802, Bowditch's New American Practical Navigator was published,
and in short order he became famous. Harvard bestowed upon him an honorary
master's degree, and he was launched on a remarkable career in which he balanced
business and scientific pursuits.

-.Jn May, 1803, the Essex Fire &amp; Marine Insurance Co. took a lease on the north end
of the Essex Bank house at $70 per annum, and in October, 1803, took the two lower
rooms of the north end of the Bank building, on Market (now Central) Street (EIHC
68:298). In 1804, Nathaniel Bowditch, returned from his fifth and last voyage,
became president of the above insurance company. In the summer of 1804, the
Essex Bank purchased from William Appleton his Central Street house (where
Bowditch resided at the time of the 1800 census), near the comer of Essex on the
east side. Beginning on 1 Aug. 1804 Nathaniel Bowditch was a tenant of the Bank
in the north end of that house at $190 per annum, while Col. William Raymond Lee
was tenant of the south end of that house at $230 per annum. Col. Lee, formerly of
Marblehead (185 Washington Street), was a Custom House official (the custom
House was then on Central Street). The two men were to share the yard, pump,
aqueduct hook-up, necessary, and garden. There was a two-story outbuilding, the
lower part to be used by Col. Lee, the upper part by Mr. Bowditch, who ended his
tenancy on 14 June 1805 (EIHC 68:240).
It would appear that the Bowditches-next moved into the northern half of a house
owned by Jonathan Hodges, Nathaniel's former employer, located not far from the

�comer of Essex Street, on the westerly side of Summer Street. Jonathan Hodges had
purchased that property in December, 1796, from Sally Blyth, widow of Samuel
Blyth (ED 161:94); and the Hodges family had evidently moved into the northern
part of the house while Mrs. Blyth occupied the southern half: per the 1800 census,
Jonathan Hodges (1764-1837) was listed between Ebenezer Pope and Sally Blyth,
on Summer Street. The Hodges family evidently resided in that house until 1805,
when Mr. Hodges built a new house on Chestnut Street, but kept half of the Blythe
house on Summer Street. Bowditch evidently moved into the Hodges part of the
. Blyth house, on Summer Street, possibly beginning in June, 1805 (when Bowditch's
lease on the Central Street half-house expired). Bowditch himself, in his notes
regarding observation of an 1805 solar eclipse, wrote that, "the place where this
latitude was observed was in the garden adjoining Essex Bank in Market Street,
Salem" (EIHC 79:215). Market Street was the former name of Central Street. By
\ 1806, he was residing in the Summer Street half-house owned by Jonathan Hodges,
for, regarding the June, 1806, observation ofa solar eclipse, he wrote, "the
observations were made in the garden adjoining the house of Mr. Hodges in which I
then lived" and in which he was still living in 1808 (EIHC 79:217). Perhaps the
Bowditches continued to reside in the Summer Street house until they moved in at
312 Essex Street in 1811.
In 1804 Mr. Bowditch had left the East Church (Unitarian) of William Bentley and
had joined the North Church (Unitarian) of Mr. Prince-a move that reflected
Bowditch's strong associations with the town's Federalists, among them his old
mentor Nathan Read, who had been put up by the Derbys as the successful
Federalist candidate for Congress._ Having shifted his religious affiliation, it was
·perhaps easier for Bowditch to move into the western end of town, which was the
Federalist bastion. Certainly Bentley, who had played an important role in the
education of the young Nat Bowditch, and had been his minister since 1791, was
deeply hurt by Bowditch's defection (see his diary), but evidently said nothing in
public. Shortly before his death, Bentley, in April, 1818, ran in the Register
newspaper an appreciative notice of the achievements of Nathaniel Bowditch.
The War of 1812 has already been discussed. After the war, Salem tried to reestablish its foreign trade, with the intention of building it to pre-war levels. The
· task proved impossible, for international conditions had changed dramatically, and
domestic manufacturing was on the rise, with severe consequences on imports.
Salem was able to open new markets in Africa and other places, and encouraged the
town's fishery in order to provide a staple export commodity. Into the 1820s the
foreign trade continued prosperous; and new markets were opened with Madagascar
(1820), which supplied tallow and ivory, and Zanzibar (1825), whence came gum

�copal, used to make varnish. This opened a huge and lucrative trade in which Salem
dominated, and its vessels thus gained access to all of the east African ports. From
1827 to 1870, there were 189 arrivals in Salem from Zanzibar, carrying ivory, gum
copal, and coffee.
The pre-war partisan politics of the town were not resumed post-war, as the middleclass "mechanics" (artisans) became more powerful and brought about civic
harmony, largely through the Salem Charitable Mechanic Association (founded
1817). Salem's general maritime foreign commerce fell off sharply in the late
1820s. Imports, which were the cargoes in Salem ships, were supplanted by
American goods, now being produced in great quantities. The interior of the country
was being opened for settlement, .and many Salemites moved away to these new
· lands of opportunity. To the north, the falls of the Men-imack River powered large
new textile mills (Lowell was founded in 1823), which created great wealth for their
investors; and in general it seemed that the tide of opportunity was ebbing away
from Salem. Most of Salem's merchants committed themselves completely to
continuing their merchant shipping, while merchants in Boston and other places
invested in canals and textile factories. Nathaniel Bowditch, who had become a very
astute investor, could see that his future.lay in Boston, with its huge mixed economy,
and not in Salem, with its insistence on foreign trade. In 1823, he decided to move
away to Boston.
In July, 1823, for $3900, the Bowditch homestead was sold at auction to Dr. John
Treadwell (ED 233:183). Dr. Treadwell, who resided on North Street nearby, took
some of the back land of the homestead that he had bought; and on Aug. 1st Dr
Treadwell sold the house and land for $3500 to William Procter, Salem merchant
(ED 233:196). Mr. Procter, wife Sarah, and family, who had resided at Buffum's
Comer (Essex Street at Boston Street), soon moved into this house (312 Essex). He
. was a merchant, and in 1825 he was a partner of Robert Brookhouse in the
ownership of the brig Siren (see EIHC 64:116,118). Evidently Mr. Procter took out
a mortgage on his new homestead with William F. Gardner.

Mr. Procter acquired or inherited a small interest in the homestead to the east of his
new home. He sued to have his interest set off from the rest of that adjoining
property (the "Witch House" and its land); and on 24 June 1826 the Court awarded
him a long strip of land fronting about 10' on Essex Street and running back about
130' (ED 253:231). Part of the old Curwen house stood on this strip, but Procter
was not entitled to ownership of any of that house. By July, 1829, Mr. Procter was
ready to sell his homestead; and on 23 July 1829 for $3997.76 he paid off the
mortgage to Mr. Gardner and: for $4500 sold the homestead to David Cummins Esq.

�of Salem (ED 253:232,233). For the next ten years, Mr. Cummins and his family
would reside here.
In 1830 occurred a horrifying crime that brought disgrace to Salem. Old Capt.
Joseph White, a wealthy merchant, resided in the house now called the GardnerPingree house, on Essex Street. One night, intruders broke into his mansion and
stabbed him to death. All of Salem buzzed with the news of murderous thugs; but
the killers, as it happened, were members of Salem's elite class and relatives of the
victim. A Crowninshield committed suicide, and two Knapps were hanged. The
results of the investigation and trial were very damaging, and more of the
respectable families quit the infamous town of Salem.
Salem's remaining merchants had to move quickly to take their equity out of
wharves and warehouses and ships and put it into manufacturing and transportation,
as the advent of railroads and can~ls in the 1830s diverted both capital and trade
· away from the coast. Some merchants did not make the transition, and were ruined.
Old-line areas of work, like rope-making, sail-making, and ship chandleries,
gradually declined and disappeared. Through the late 1820s and well into the 1830s,
Salem slumped badly.

David Cummins (1785-1855), the owner of the house as of 1829, was a judge as of
1828 and appears not to have been affected unduly by Salem's downturn. He was
born in Topsfield and proved to be a very bright boy. He was sent to Dartmouth
College, and, after graduating in 1806, settled in Salem, where he read the law under
Samuel Putnam of Federal Street, the town's pre-eminent lawyer and instructor in
law. He was something of a poet, and (evidently) published his poern, The Hermit,
in 1806. Mr. Cummins was admitted to the Essex Bar in 1809, and soon made a
· name for himself in law and politics. His party affiliation was with the antiFederalists, or Jeffersonian Democratic-Republicans, and he allied himself with
another young transplanted Salem lawyer, Joseph Story of Marblehead, also notable
for his poetry.
The Democratic-Republicans' Fourth of July oration in 1811 "was delivered by Mr.
David Cummings, a young gentleman of the law," according to William Bentley's
diary. In the next year, Mr. Cummins married Sally Porter of Topsfield. She soon
died.
In 1813, David Cummins was nominated as the Republican candidate for Town
Clerk. Running as part of a slate, he and the Republicans were defeated, 834 to 886,

�by the Federalists (see Bentley, 13 March 1813). In July, 1815, he married
Catherine Kittredge, the daughter of Dr. Thomas Kittredge of Andover; and they had
children before her untimely death, from apoplexy, in 1824. In October, 1825, Mr.
Cummins married his second wife's sister, Miss Maria F. Kittredge. They would
have several children, of whom the eldest was Maria Susannah Cummins, born 9
April 1827.
Mr. Cummins was recalled as "a man of strong powers, and prominent at the bar,
and is well remembered for his ardent natural eloquence at public meetings and in
addresses to juries. His pure and noble spirit, and transparent character, secured the
respect and confidence of all, while his genial ingenuousness, freshness of thought
and expression, acuteness of perception, keen but playful and benignant satire, and
an enthusiasm all his own, delighted every circle in which he moved" (per C. W.
Upham, p. 28, Memoir of Francis Peabody).
In 1826, David Cummins spoke in opposition to continuing the work of the Salem
fy!ill Dam Corporation, which had planned to dam the North River in order to create
water power for industrial production in Salem. His opposition was countered by a
speech by his old colleague Joseph Story, the Salem-based U.S. Supreme Court
justice, whose arguments won the day and caused Cummins to retract his opposition.
The project, led by John Pickering and backed by most leading Salemites, failed
anyway. Mr. Cummins "was a very successful practitioner in Salem until he was
called to the bench of the Court of Common Pleas, in 1828" (p. 251, Essex Bar
Memorials, 1900).
In 1829, the Cummins family moved into this house. Judge Cummins was then 44,
and his daughter Maria was just two.
Miss Kiddy King, in her memoirs, recalled seeing some on Salem's notables passing
her house in Essex Street on their way to the Salem Atheneum (then located
downtown), which was open only between noon and one. In those days, gentlemen
wore dressing gowns in the street in hot weather. First she watched the stately and
fearsome minister, John Brazer, pass by. "After the last whisk of Dr. Brazer's gown
had disappeared in the distance, Judge Cummins would come prancing along, in a
gay flowered long gown, cordial and genial, bowing and smiling to everyone he
met-a cheerful homely figure, everything just the opposite of the dignified
pastor." She also recalled that "above North Street, Essex Street was absolutely like
a village highway, with grassy roadsides starred with dandelions, and it was a pretty
sight at sunset of an evening in May, to see the cows come slowly meandering down
from the great pasture, their way along the street marked by columbines and

in

�houstonias, dropped from the great bunches carried by the boys who drove them."
(pp. 17-19, Catherine King's memoir of childhood, When I Lived In Salem).
In 1839, Judge Cummins decided to move to Springfield, Mass. On 31 August
1839, for $4940 he sold the homestead to John G. Treadwell, Salem physician, using
. Gilbert G. Newhall as a straw (Eb 314:277-278). The Cumrriinses did move away
to Springfield. Maria S. Cummins, then twelve, had already showed an interest in
literature; in Springfield, encouraged by her poet-manque father, she attended Mrs.
Sedgwick's school in Lenox and blossomed as a writer. At twenty she began to
write stories that were published in the Atlantic Monthly, and in 1854, when Ms.
Cummins was 27, her first novel, The Lamplighter, about a foundling who was
adopted and finally re-united with her father, was published and sold 40,000 copies
in just a few weeks. It was one of the biggest best-sellers of its day, and inspired the
envy and jeers of Hawthorne and others whose audiences were not so l~rge. Her
father, Judge David Cummins, lived to see his daughter's success, in which he no
doubt took great pride; and he died in the following year, 1855, in Dorchester,
Mass., where his daughter lived too. She continued to write and publish popular
novels: Mabel Vaughan (1857), El Fureidis (1860), and Haunted Hearts (1864).
After the publication of the latter, she fell ill and never recovered, lingering for two
years before her death on 1 October 1866, aged 39 years (see Dictonary of
American Biography listing).
: Despite setbacks and uncertainties, Salem was chaiiered as a city in 1836. City Hall
was built 1837-8 and the city seal was adopted with an already-anachronistic Latin
motto of "to the farthest port of the rich East"-a far cry from "Go West, young
man!" The Panic of 1837, a brief, sharp, nationwide economic depression, caused
even more Salem families to head west in search of fortune and a better future.
Salem had not prepared for the industrial age, and had few natural advantages. The
North River served not to power factories but mainly to flush the waste from the
many tanneries (23 by 1832) that had set up along its banks. Throughout the 1830s,
the leaders of Salem scrambled to re-invent an economy for their fellow citizens,
many of whom were mariners without much sea-faring to do. Ingenuity, ambition,
and hard work would have to carry the day.
One inspiration was the Salem Laboratory, Salem's first science-based
manufacturing enterprise, founded in 1813 to produce chemicals. At the plant built
in 1818 in North Salem on the North River, the production of alum and blue vitriol
was a specialty; and it proved a very successful business. Salem's whale-fishery,
. active for many years in the early -f800s, led, in the 1830s, to the manufacturing of
high-quality candles at Stage Point, along with machine oils. The candles proved

�very popular. Lead-manufacturing began in the 1820s, and grew large after 1830,
when Wyman's gristmills on th~ Forest River were retooled for making high-quality
white lead and sheet lead (the approach to Marblehead is still called Lead Mills Hill,
although the empty mill buildings burned down in 1960s).
These enterprises were a start toward taking Salem in a new direction. In 183 8 the
Eastern Rail Road began operating between Boston and Salem, which gave the
people of Salem and environs a direct route to the region's largest market. The new
railroad tracks ran right over the middle of the Mill Pond; the tunnel under
. Washington Street was built in 18-39; and the line was extended to Newburyport in
1840.
In the 1840s, new companies in new lines of business arose in Salem. The tanning
and curing of leather was a very important industry by the mid- l 800s. It was
conducted on and near Boston Street, along the upper North River. There were 41
tanneries in 1844, and 85 in 1850, employing 550 hands. The leather business
would continue to grow in importance throughout the 1800s. In 1846 the Naumkeag
Steam Cotton Company completed the construction at Stage Point of the largest
factory building in the United States, 60' wide by 400' long. It was an immediate
success, and hundreds of people found employment there, many of them living in
industrial tenements built nearby. Also in the 1840s, a new method was introduced
to make possible high-volume industrial shoe production. In Lynn, the factory
system was perfected, and that city became the nation's leading shoe producer.
Salem had shoe factories too, and attracted shoe workers from outlying towns and
country areas. Even the population changed, as hundreds of Irish families, fleeing
the Famine, settled in Salem; and the men went to work in the factories and as
· laborers.
The new owner, Dr. J.G. Treadwell, did not reside here, but rented out the house for
income. In 1840, the house was evidently inhabited by Ephraim Russell and his
family (per 1840 census). Mr. Russell (1789-1870), a native of Princeton, Mass.,
worked as a baker. He, "of Boston" was in Salem by 27 Nov. 1813, when he
married the widow Sarah Shepard. He settled in Salem. Mrs. Shepard had Shepard
children, evidently, including Samuel and Elizabeth. Ephraim and Sarah had at least
one child, Sarah Ann Russell, born in 1821. In 183 7, baker Ephraim Russell and
. family resided on the "turnpike" {Highland Avenue); by 1842 his home was at 14 St.
Peter St., which, by 1846, he used as boarding house (see Salem Directories). The
Russells' daughter Sarah in 1845 married Daniel H. Jewett, 25, one of Salem's
foremost contractors, who built, among others, the fine house at 78 Washington
Square East in 1846, to the plans of the architect Gridley Bryant, for Gilbert G.

�Newhall, who had once served as Judge Cummins' straw in the conveyance of the
house at 312 Essex Street. The D.H. Jewetts resided at 3 Briggs St.; and Mr. Jewett
had his carpenter shop at 25 Vine Street (now Charter) (1846 Salem Directory). By
1850, Ephraim &amp; Sarah Russell, 66, had moved in with the Jewetts (and their
daughter Sarah E., three) at 3 Briggs Street, along with a currier, Samuel Shepard,
Elizabeth Shepard, and Hannah Page, 31,- and another Page (1850 census, ward two,
house 185). Beginning in 185 5 Mr. Russell resided with the D .H. Jewett family at
61 Charter Street, a fine house at the comer of Central Street. He would reside there
for 15 years and die on 21April1870, of a lung disease, in his 82d year.

In the face of change, some members of Salem's waning merchant class continued to
pursue their sea-borne businesses;_but even the conditions of shipping changed, and
· Salem was left on the ebb tide. In the late 1840s, giant clipper ships replaced the
smaller vessels that Salem men had sailed around the world; and the clippers, with
their deep drafts and large holds,-were usually too large for Salem and its harbor.
The town's shipping soon consisted of little more than Zanzibar-trade vessels and
visits from Down East coasters with cargoes of fuel wood and building timber. By .
1850 Salem was about finished as a working port. A picture of Salem's sleepy
waterfront is given by Hawthorne in his "introductory section" (really a sketch of
Salem) to The Scarlet Letter, which he began while working in the Custom House.
Between 1842 and 1846 Mrs. Elizabeth Derby, widow ofE. Hersey Derby, had
moved to 312 Essex Street, and she was still there in 1851, and perhaps later. She
was born Elizabeth Derby Pickman, in Salem in 1799, the daughter of Benjamin T.
Pickman and Anstiss (Derby) Pickman, and was a granddaughter of both Col.
Benjamin Pickman (Jr.) (1740-1817) and E. Hasket Derby (1739-1799), the greatest
merchant of his day. She remained single until 1837, when she married her cousin,
E. Hersey Derby of Boston, a lawyer and a graduate of Harvard, Class of 1818. He
died two years later, on 14 Nov. 18-3 9, leaving no children. She did not re-marry.
°The Salem Directory for 1846, 1850, and 1851 list her as residing at 312 Essex
Street, but in the 1850 census shejs residing on Lynn Street in a household of
·herself, 50, Martha Maxfield, 50, and Mary Walcott, 20 (see census, ward four,
house 594). The 1850 census does not list any residents in the house at 312 Essex
Street (or the house that should be it in the census-taker's sequence), so it may have
been temporarily empty while Mrs. Derby shifted her residence, perhaps seasonally,
from Lynn Street. In the 1851 Mcintyre Atlas of Salem, this house (#312) is
identified as belonging to Mrs. E.H. Derby. She died on 8 May 1870, aged 71 years.

'}0

�The, symbol of Salem's new industrial economy was the large twin-towered granite
train station, built in 1848-9 on filled-in land at the foot of Washington Street, where
before had been the merchants' wharves. The 1850s brought continued growth: new
churches, schools, streets, stores, etc. Catholic churches were built, and new
housing was constructed in North Salem and the Gallows Hill areas to accommodate
the workers. In March, 1853, several streets were re-named and re-numbered,
including the consolidation of County, Marlboro, and Federal Streets as Federal
Street.
The owner of the house, Dr. John G. Treadwell, died in 1856. Evidently he devised
the premises to the Massachusetts General Hospital, which in tum conveyed the
property in 1858 to Joseph B.F . .Osgood, a Salem lawyer. Mr. Osgood, the son of
Capt. William Osgood, had grown up in the house at 314 Essex Street. He was a
nephew of Salem's first historian, Joseph B. Felt, for whom he was named. He was
a leading Salem lawyer of his time. In 1858; just before moving to this house, he
resided at 17 Norman Street and had offices at 235 Essex Street. Mr. Osgood ran for
· Mayor of Salem several times from the late 1850s on, but was defeated until 1864,
when he won. The Civil War had begun in April, 1861, and had gone on for four
years, during which hundreds of Salem men served in the army and navy, and many
were killed or died of disease or abusive treatment while imprisoned. Hundreds
· more suffered wounds, or broken health. The people of Salem contributed greatly to
efforts to alleviate the suffering of the soldiers, sailors, and their families. Joseph
Osgood took office as Mayor in January, 1865, and helped guide the city through the
last months of the conflict; and there was great celebration when the war finally
ended in the spring of 1865.
Through the 1860s and 1870s, Salem continued to pursue a manufacturing course.
The managers and capitalists tended to build their new, grand houses along
. Lafayette Street (these houses may still be seen, south of Roslyn Street). For the
workers, they built more and more tenements near the mills of Stage Point. A
second, larger, factory building for the Naumkeag Steam Cotton Company would be
added in 1859, and a third in 1865; and by 1879 the mills would employ 1200
,people and produce annually 14,700,000 yards of cloth. Shoe-manufacturing also
continued to expand, and by 1880 Salem would have 40 shoe factories employing
600-plus operatives. More factories and more people required more space for
buildings, more roads, and more storage areas.
After withstanding the pressures of the new industrial city for about 50 years,
Salem's rivers began to disappear. The once-broad North River was filled from both
shores, and became a canal along Bridge Street above the North Bridge. The large

31

�and beautiful Mill Pond, which occupied the whole area between the present
Jefferson Avenue, Canal Street, and Loring Avenue, finally vanished beneath streets,
storage areas, junk-yards, rail-ya~ds, and parking lots. The South River, too, with its
epicenter at Central Street (that's why there was a Custom House built there in 1805)
disappeared under the pavement of Riley Plaza and New Derby Street, and its old
wharves (even the mighty Union Wharf, formerly Long Wharf, at the foot of Union
Street) were joined together with much in-fill and turned into coal-yards and lumberyards. Only a canal was left, running in from Derby and Central Wharves to
Lafayette Street.
Judge Joseph B.F. Osgood continued to practice law, with his office at One Central
Street. As late as 1908 he resided here at 312 Essex, along with a widow, Mrs.
Henry A. (Elizabeth C.) Cook. After the Osgood ownership ended in 1911, the
house would be used for apartments and shops (see John Goffs report on this house
and its occupants).
Salem kept building infrast1ucture; and new businesses arose, and established
businesses expanded. Retail stores prospered, and machinists, carpenters,
millwrights, and other specialists all thrived. In the 1870s, French-Canadian
families began coming to work in-Salem's mills and factories, and more houses and
tenements filled were built in what had been open areas of the city. The Canadians
were followed in the early 20th century by large numbers of Polish and Ukrainian
families, who settled primarily in the Derby Street neighborhood. By the eve of
World War One, Salem was a bustling, polyglot city that supported large department
stor~s and large factories of every description. Its politics were lively, and its
economy was strong.
\

On June 25, 1914, in the morning, in. Blubber Hollow (Boston Street opposite
Federal), a fire started in one of Salem's fire-prone wooden tanneries. This fire soon
consumed the building and raced out of control, for the west wind was high and the
season had been dry. The next building caught fire, and the next, and out of Blubber
Hollow the fire roared easterly, a monstrous front of flame and smoke, wiping out
the houses of Boston Street, Essex Street, and upper Broad Street, and then sweeping
through Hathorne, Winthrop, Endicott, and other residential streets. Men and
machines could not stop it: the enormous fire crossed over into South Salem and
destroyed the neighborhoods wes! of Lafayette Street, then devoured the mansions
· of Lafayette Street itself, and raged onward into the tenement district. Despite the
combined efforts of heroic fire crews from many towns and cities, the fire
overwhelmed everything in its path: it smashed into the large factory buildings of
the Naumkeag Steam Cotton Company (Congress Street), which exploded in an

�inferno; and it rolled down Lafayette Street and across the water to Derby Street.
There, just beyond Union Street, after a 13-hour rampage, the monster died, having
consumed 250 acres, 1600 houses, and 41 factories, and leaving three dead and
thousands homeless. Some people had insurance, some did not; all received much
support and generous donationS--from all over the country and the world. It was one
of the greatest urban disasters in the history of the United States, and the people of
Salem would take years to recover from it. Eventually, they did, and many of the
former houses and businesses were rebuilt; and several urban-renewal projects
(including Hawthorne Boulevard, which involved removing old houses and
widening old streets) were put into effect. By the 1920s, Salem was once again a
thriving city; and its tercentenary in 1926 was a time of great celebration.
In 1946, due to the widening of North Street and the consequent need to re-locate the
Jonathan Curwen house (Witch House), the house at 312 Essex Street was scheduled
to be moved from its original site. Before the move, parts of the house were torn
down (an Osgood addition in the rear) or pulled away, including the old Samuel
Curwen "store" in the rear ell, along with another section of the rear ell, perhaps
built for William Ward c.1805. This rear ell was trundled off to Cambridge Street in
1946 (see May 11 Salem Evening News), and became the largest part of the house
built in that year at 1Yi Cambridge Street. The main part of the house at 312 Essex
was moved around to its new site on North Street, where it stands today.
At 1Yi Cambridge Street, the new house was evidently used as a two-family, since it
had separate staircases until the Kearneys bought it. In 1948, the Naumkeag
Directory lists just one occupant, John J. Perkins, a mechanical engineer, who
resided here with wife Elizabeth W., and any children they might have had. The
Perkinses resided here in 1949; and in 1950 and 1951 the house is listed as the
residence ofF. Anthony Butler (wife Nancy P.), who worked in Danvers.
The arrival of suburban shopping malls and the relocation of manufacturing
businesses took their toll on Salem, as they have with many other cities. More than
most, Salem has navigated its way forward into the present with success, trading on
its share of notoriety arising from the witch trials, but also from its history as a great
seaport and as the home of Bowditch, Mcintire, Bentley, Story, and Hawthorne.
Most of all, it remains a city where the homes of the old-time merchants, mariners,
and mill-operatives are all honored as a large part of what makes Salem different
from any other place.
--6 Nov. 2001, Robert Booth for Historic Salem Inc. (note: this report was built on the foundation of John
Goffs research in connection with his report on the house, its architecture, occupants, and associations).

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