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IV
GLIMPSES OF BUSINESS LIFE WHALING AND WHALEMEN — HE WANTED HIS
SHIP INSURED — STEPHEN GIRARD’S RISE TO POWER — A PHYSICIAN WHO CURED ALL HIS
PATIENTS — THE GOLDSMITH’S ACCOUNTS — WHY BRYAN O HARA INCREASED HIS CHARGES —
DIFFICULTIES OF TRADE DURING THE REVOLUTION — ROBERT MORRIS IN FINANCIAL
DIFFICULTIES — HUMOR IN THE PRISON
ONE is startled to find in William Penn’s
“Further Account of Pennsylvania” a paragraph that speaks of an industry that
in the minds of most people could not be connected with Philadelphia. He said: “Mighty Whales roll upon the Coast,
near the mouth of the Bay of Delaware. Eleven caught and workt into Oyl one
season. We justly hope a considerable profit by a Whalery, they being so
numerous and the Shore so suitable.” Later in the same document he quotes
from a letter written to him in August, 1685, by one of the residents of
Philadelphia: “I do understand three Companies for
Whale Catching are designed to fish in the River Mouth this season.” For many years whaling was a
profitable pursuit, and even as late as 1814, the unwieldy denizen of the deep
was not a stranger to Philadelphia. On December 3 of that year an announcement
was given publicity, which told the people of the city by the Delaware: “The Whale which was harpooned and
taken by four barges after an arduous chase of three days, in the river
Delaware, near Trenton Bridge, will for a few days be exhibited near the High
Bridge, Kensington. This whale is believed to be of the familiar species called
the Spermacetti Whale. It has been viewed by several efficient Whale Fishers,
and all agreed that notwithstanding his great size and extraordinary strength
of frame and muscle, he is a young Whale. . . . It may never occur that the
present generation may have an opportunity of gratifying a laudable curiosity
at so little trouble, and so trifling an expense as they now can. The Whale is
pickled, and in as pure a state, as the day it was caught.” The business acumen that led some of
the early colonists to go after whales and taught a later resident of the city
to make capital out of a “pickled whale,” was a characteristic of
Philadelphia’s merchants from the beginning of the city’s history. They knew
how to turn their hands to anything and to make profit wherever they turned. The ledger of Judge William Trent —
for whom Trenton was named — shows that he was “a shipping merchant and a ship
owner, a dealer in or handler of cord-wood, wine, brandy, rum, pottery, flour,
bran, tobacco, bread, salt, molasses, tallow, cordage, powder, servants, corn,
butter, negroes staves, blankets, ‘oyl,’ wampum, yarn, insurance, exchange
notes, ‘orders,’ real estate, ships, horses, cows, knives, anchors, and dry
goods. In 1703 he handled 282,018 hundredweight of tobacco and 2579 skins,
besides the furs and skins of 48 elk, 1269 deer, 101 beaver, 104 otter, 1381
raccoon, 1209 bear, 752 fox and wolf, 687 mink and marten, 738 muskrats and 330
“sundries.” Most of these goods were sent out of
the country, for his chief business was supplying cargoes from Philadelphia and
receiving cargoes sent to the city in return. It is said that he had an
interest varying from one-sixth to the whole in every “voyage” or “venture”
that came to or went out of that part of Philadelphia in 1703. An associate of Judge Trent was the
William Hudson who became mayor in 1725. To his work as a tanner — he owned a
number of tanneries in and near the city — he added that of the ship owner and
shipping merchant. For nearly fifty years he was one of the city’s leaders in
business. As early as 1710 Philadelphia’s
water front was a busy place. Richard Castleman, “Gent.,” who came to town
during that year, said: “There are several coves and docks
where large ships are built; and by a moderate computation there have been
loaded from the stocks of the city . . more than 300 sail of ships, besides
small craft, which may in some sort give us an idea of the opulency of the
place.” For many years much of the wealth was tied up in vessels and their cargoes. At one time one merchant controlled or owned twenty vessels, ships, brigantines, schooners, and sloops. In these vessels he received rum and sugar from Barbadoes, linen from Liverpool, rice from South Carolina, wine from Madeira, and spirits from Jamaica; and he sent muskets, pistols, cutlasses and gunpowder to Jamaica, onions to Antigua, and chocolate to Virginia.
A letter sent to “Mr. Wharton” from
New York, dated January 28, 1756, indicates that a large business in ship
insurance must have been done here. The letter was written by a vessel owner
who wished to make a better bargain in insuring a ship that had been a long
time on its way than he had any right to expect to make. He asked Mr. Wharton
to advise him what “Insheurence” could be made on “ye Schooner Margret” From
hence to ye Coast of Affrica & From thence for Barbadus, for advice, if no
warr from Barbadus to Charlestown, So Carolina — If a warr to sell at Barbadus,
or proceede to Jamaca.” He added the information that the vessel sailed on
November 16, 1755, that she was “mounted with 4 Carege Gunns & 5 Swivald
Blunderbuses, a Sofishent quantity of muskets & Ammonisen.” He wanted £1000
Inshuerence made on Vessel and Cargoe — but he was unwilling to pay more than a
modest premium. Ship builders as well as ship owners
had an eye to the main chance. An early advertisement offered for sale “the
ship Ocean, copper fastened and copper sheathed to the bends, and ready for an
Indian voyage or any other voyage.” To this announcement was added the
information that the vender had for sale “a few pipes of old high-flavored 4th
proof Charante brandy.” The story of a ship of that day from
the stocks through the various voyages that helped to fill the coffers of its
owner is suggestive. There is, for instance, the record of Stephen Girard’s
ship Good Friends. 1 She was bought, a wreck, in 1792.
When rebuilt she was of 246 tons and carried twenty guns. In 1793 she went to
Bordeaux where she was held because of the embargo. In 1795 she was again at
Philadelphia. Later voyages were made to Hamburg, Amsterdam, Bordeaux, Isle of
France, and Leghorn. In 1806 she was boarded by a British privateer. In 1808
she was laid up on account of the Long Embargo. In 1809 she sailed for
Gothenburg but was captured by a Danish privateer. She was released a year
later. In 1811 Girard sent her to England. In 1812 she put in at Amelia Island,
off the coast of Florida. Later she was seized by United States Customs
authorities for violation of the Non-Importation law. Suit was entered against the
owner for $915,000. Then she went to Charleston for cotton destined for Europe.
On her capture by the British she has sold to Barings for £3000, but after the
close of the war they offered to resell her to Girard. He was unable to buy
“that favorite vessel,” because of the impossibility of obtaining register But the story of Stephen Girard
himself is far more interesting than that of any of his ships. In May, 1776,
while on his way home to France, in a ship of which he was master as well as
part owner, a storm drove him into Delaware Bay. A pilot was secured, and the
vessel was taken to safety just in time to escape the British fleet. Captain
Girard had no money then current in Philadelphia, so he borrowed from a
stranger the amount of the pilot’s fee. Thus the future philanthropist came on
borrowed money to the city which was later to benefit by his gifts. Disposing of his vessel, he engaged
in commerce. On October 27, 1778, he took the oath of allegiance to the country
that had received him so graciously. At the time he was living at Mt. Holly,
New Jersey. Return to the city became possible in 1779. A vessel was built for
him and sea ventures were once more undertaken. In 1791 and 1792 he built six new
ships, marvels of speed, which were at once employed in trade to all parts of
the world. The extent of the commerce is indicated thus by Ingram in his
biography of Girard: “A ship would sail with a cargo of
cotton and grain for Bordeaux, where it would reload with fruit and wine for
Saint Petersburg, and there discharge this cargo, replacing it with hemp and
iron. In turn this would be sold in Amsterdam for specie, laden with which the
ship would sail for Calcutta and Canton, where tea, silks, and East India goods
would be bought for the return voyage to Philadelphia.” The list of exports from
Philadelphia in the years following 1765 is surprising. They included wheat,
flour, bread, stoves and beading, corn, iron, soap, flax seed, furs, lard,
butter, beef, pork, walnut logs, deerskins, potash, brown sugar, loaf sugar,
“melasses,” wine, oil, rum, fish, candles, chocolate, salt, cotton, wool,
leather, rice, coaches, chariots, chaises, sulkys, wagons, wheelbarrows, drays,
ploughs, barrows, pumps, boats, carts, saddletrees, cartridges, stoves, bricks,
lime, tobacco, indigo, turpentine, paper, pasteboard. Of course the quantity of
some of the products was quite small. Before the Revolutionary War many things
were shipped as raw material to foreign markets, and were later returned in a
manufactured state. But after the war much of the raw material was manufactured
at home, and the finished production sent abroad. Philadelphia merchants did a large
business with the country districts, in spite of the fact that transportation
arrangements were of the crudest. Frequently a visitor to the city was
entrusted with all sorts of commissions to the stores, or a resident would be
asked by some country cousins to give freely the benefit of his leasure for a
trip to the markets. Before the Revolution Neddy Burd, of Lancaster, who was
attending the college which later became part of the University of
Pennsylvania, sometimes had so many commissions given to him that his studies
must have suffered. Once he was asked to get for Granny yarn, “as near the
color of the sample as could be got.” Then he was asked to secure lemons and a
Gloucester cheese. He succeeded in buying the last cheese on sale in the city,
so he wrote home, “Unless this had been secured you must have waited for
English cheese until the agreement of our merchants about Non-Importation
should be dissolved by a Repeal of the Revenue Act.” His grandfather took his
turn by asking him to procure such necessary things as a bottle of red ink,
twenty-five gallons of molasses and a lot of salmon. Among
the records of business and
professional life in the city some of the most curious are the bills of
physicians. One of these, dated 1717, and made out by Doctor Jones to
John
Russell, was remarkable for the fact that all the charges were for
cures. There
were eight of these charges, some of them being: “To curing
his Seruant’s knee,
£1;” “To curing his mans foot,”
4 shillings; “To curing his daughter’s
foot,” 3
shillings; “To curing his Sons sore Eye,” 3
Shillings. Surely no man could
object to paying a bill like that! Dr. Benjamin Rush presented to the
estate of John Lukens a bill whose greatest peculiarity was that it covered
items for three years, from 1773 to 1776. The charge of a goldsmith in 1734
included a silver thimble and topping another, making a milk pot, “Soydering a
Tankard and Beading out ye Bruises,” a set of Breeches Buttons, a chain and
strainer for Tea Pot, a Soup Spoon, making and mending a Scizzor Chain. Unless the goldsmith was an
exception, bills ran a long time and were very seldom paid in full. Remnants
of the charge remained for years. There were not lacking in the city
men who felt that training and experience in London was a great recommendation.
In 1746 a stone mason advertised thus: “At the new Marble Shop, at the sign
of the Mason’s Arms in Arch Street, Philadelphia, are sold Chimney-Pieces,
Slabs for Hearths, Monuments, Fonts for Churches, Tombstones and Head-stones,
with all sorts of Marble Work, by George Harrison, who serv’d a regular
Apprenticeship to that Business and followed it for several years in London.” To this advertisement was appended
an “N.B.” “The said George Harrison was
imploy’d by several Gentlemen in England as a Surveyor, in the Designing,
Making Draughts of, and superintending their Buildings: and having had very considerable
Practice there, is also desirous to serve any Gentlemen in these Parts; that
may have Occasion for any Thing in that Way.” Those who made out the bills for
goods sold a hundred and fifty years ago and more must have had ample leisure
as well as a rich fund of good humor. Thomas Livezey, on June 29, 1764, sent to
Thomas Wharton a message that ought to have brought a prompt remittance, and
without any claim for abatement:
“It is thirty bushells I have sent thee, and Notwithstanding the Labour and Care I have taken to oblige thee which the bran itself will testify to anyone Who is a Judge I have charged only 15 pr. bushel — Lower than Can Well be afforded; but I shall not regard that as it is to a friend — it May appear to thee perhaps that I have Said Rather tomuch in praise of the bran yet upon Examination I think it will appear [illegible] for if it Don’t fully answer the Description I have Given it I should Not be unwilling to make some abatement in price — this from thy Most Respectfull & Sincere friend Thomas Livezey.”
A bill of another sort was sent to
Thomas Wharton by Bryan O’Hara, who, instead of talking of an abatement in
charge, gave notice of an increase. Perhaps this was due to the troubled
politics of the day, for the bill was sent in 1774. It was for “one year’s
Sheaving and dressing your Wigs,” and the amount was £2.0.0. To the bill was
appended this note: “Sir I take this method of informing
you, that I think the above too little for doing your business 2/3d of my
customers pays me three pounds a year and does not get quite so much done, for
instance Messrs John Reyne & John Bringhurst pays it, wou’d be much obliged
to you to consider it, for the Ensuing Year, I am Sir your H’ble Servt BRYAN O HARA.” Elliott Duncan, who, in 1767, had a
shop “nearly opposite Christ Church,” was as brief in advertising his goods as
Livezey was verbose in his bill. He contented himself with stating that he
carried “a neat and General Assortment of both Wet and Dry Goods,” including
Muslin, Cambrick, Lawn, Chintzes, Poplins, Shalloons, Calicoes, Calimancoes,
Durants and Tasumies, Oznabrigs, Sattin, Peelong, Figured, and Plain Scarcenet
and Modes Taffaties.” The day book of David Evans is
exceedingly interesting because of the variety of his goods, the amount of his
charges, and the character of his customers. Here are some sample items: 1774, Sept. R. Clement
Biddle, 1 Mahogany Sofa, £5. 1776, July 20. United
States of America, 161 sets of Tent Poles 4/6 each. August 12, Charles Thomson,
a Reading Desk for Congress, £1.5. November 29. Making Benches for the
Jew Synagogue. 1777, Jany 16.
Ornamenting Brig. Gen. Mercer’s Coffin with plate and handles and attendance at
funeral, £5. July 4. Charles Thomson, 1 large
writing Table, £2.1.3. 1778, Feb. 26. Lieut.
Hoysted 64th Regt., making a box for camp equipage. 1779, July 14. Estate
George Ross, Esqr. Mahogany Coffin, inscription plate, handles & case, £175
(continental currency). 1781, May 12. Library
Company of Philadelphia. Making and Staining a frame. 1781, July 19. Capt.
Audubon. Making a house for his Squirrels. 1785, April 4. State
Lottery. Making 6 boxes. 1786, January 9. Dr.
Boss, Making a Walnut Medicine Chest. £5.12. April 8. Ordered by Michael Gratz
small planed boards on which to make cakes for the Passover for Jewish
Congregation. 1787, May 27. Made a
sign for a man at corner Market and Sixth street — the sign of ye Greyhound.
Sept. 4. Hon. John Penn. Making a Walnut Coffin for Sabina Francis, a servant
of his Uncle Thomas Penn, late Proprietor, £6. 1789, June 29. Dr.
Ewing, Made a large Mahogany clock Case for the University of Pennsylvania,
£11. 1790, December 9.
Philadelphia County Commissioners — 6
Venetian Blinds for Congress, with plain fronts in Senate Chamber and Committee
Room in County Court House, at £4.10 each. 9 ditto for Arch windows down stairs
in the House of Representatives of U. S. at £6 each. 1791, October 31. John
Adams, Vice President 2 Mahogany Boards, to fix Chesters, repairing Dining
Table. £10.0. 1791, December 9. Bank
of the United States. Making a Clock case for the Directors Room, £4. 1792, April 18.
Spanish Minister. Repairing a Card table. 1796. United States of
America, making platform in Congress Hall larger and hanging 2 Doors, £3.15. 1799, November 9. Dr.
Benjamin Rush, to making 1 Mahogany Bureau Table, £7.1 as a compensation for my
son Evan Evans’ ticket of admission attending his lectures for 1798. 1801, July 21. Shipped
on the sloop Highland, for Gen. Dearborn, 16 Venetian Blinds for the War
Office, Washington, D. C. $91 pr. Blind. 1803, June 30, United
States. 6 Venetian Blinds for the Captain’s Cabin of frigate Philadelphia.
Capt. Bainbridge, $48. It will be seen that several of the
charges made above are for the making of furniture, a craft for which
Philadelphia was noted. Museums and private collections testify today that
elaborate and beautifully carved pieces were made for the discriminating and
appreciative as culture and worth increased, as well as large quantities of
rather simpler but handsome furniture for those of lesser means but equal
taste. In those days, too, architecture was
accounted a necessary part of a liberal education, and that such knowledge was
deeply grounded will be realized when it is remembered that the State House,
Christ Church and In November 1800, John Inskeep, who
was elected mayor on October 21, 1800, put in operation in Philadelphia the new
method of computation in dollars and cents. St. Peter’s were all designed by
Philadelphia men and executed by its master-carpenters. The difficulties of merchants during
the Revolution are illustrated by the experiences of J. Peters, as revealed in
a letter written to Francis Oberlin, a Bethlehem merchant, on August 24, 1779: “The blind way of trade puts me at a
stand. I cannot purchase any Coffee without taking to one bill a tierce of
Claret & sour, & at £6.8 per gall. Sugar I may purchase at about the
limited price, & that is the only article that can be brought. I have been
trying day for day, & never could get a grain of Coffee so as to sell it at
the limited price these six weeks. It may be bought, but at about 25/ per lb.
Then it is very dangerous to get it out of town; for the least triple you must
produce your bill, & swear that you have given no more, & made no
presents, neither that you intend to make any presents after you have a
certificate or permit. Some time ago I might have sent wagons out of town,
& never have been stopped, but that time is over. Should you want sugar, I
will buy for you, but I think you’d better wait till this Committee is broke.
It cannot last long, for we must all very soon shut up stores and starve.” But after the signing of the treaty
of peace business improved. One of the evidences was the increased demand for
conveyance. Quarrier & Hunter, the city’s leading carriage builders, had a
shop on Filbert Street, between Seventh and Eighth Streets. Not only did they
have many local patrons, but they numbered among their customers the ministers
of France and Holland, as well as officers of the navy and army. They were
manufacturers of coaches, chariots, chaises, phaetons, sulkies, “sociables.”
These were finished in olive, black, yellow, drab, green, brown, or purple. On the day books of the firm the
following charges were made: 1780. The French
Minister: Painting body of phaeton, borders, and moulding, cypher and flowers;
painting Coach. John Adams: Painting
phaeton and coach, and three cyphers in gilt. 1781; John Adams:
Painting chair, phaeton and carriage and ornaments. 1782. President of
Congress: Painting arms on coach, cleaning and varnishing. 1783. Thomas
Jefferson: Painting phaeton green, crests on the back. Robert Morris:
Painting chariot olive green, cheek vermilion, and gilding. Robert Morris was at the time of
this charge at the height of his prosperity. But a few years later he became
involved in financial difficulties through too sanguine investments in real
estate. After struggling for years to extricate himself he was arrested for
debt on February 15, 1798. George Eddy made the complaint against him that led
to the crisis. Of him Morris spoke in a letter to a friend: “I am here in the custody of a
sheriff’s officer. George Eddy is the most hardened villain God ever made. I
believe if I had bank bills to pay him with he would refuse them on the ground
of their not being legal tender.” The next day the writer was taken to
the debtor’s apartment of the old Prune Street Prison, where he was confined
until August 26, 1801. But the imprisonment did not crush
the man to whom the country owed so much and was repaying so little. On March
13, less than a month after his arrest, in a letter to his unfortunate partner,
John Nicholson, after speaking of Dr. Benjamin Say, whose notes to him had not
been paid, he wrote: “When Doctors of Physick instead of
their pills Become dealers in Paper, not Bank notes or Bills, Intent on their
gains they lie without fear. That Morris or Nicholson caught by the ear Can by
this Touch Stone on any one day Detect lying Lusty, or, unconscionable, Say.”
Charles Henry Hart says of the patriot, who lay for long months in the debtors’
prison: “The country for whose independence,
safety and salvation he had pledged and given his private fortune in the hour
of its deepest depression and most desperate need, forgot him when adversity
crowded upon him, and neither by word, act, or deed, helped to alleviate the
burden of his unfortunate situation. The Congress which, without his aid, never
would have had an existence to hold a session, sat within the shadow of his
prison walls but lifted not a voice or a hand to save him.” It is pleasant to know that in 1798
Washington called on his old associate in the prison, and that when Mrs. Morris
and her daughter were visiting in Virginia he and Mrs. Washington sent to them
a joint letter inviting them to go to Mt. Vernon. In this letter they asked her
to “be assured we ever have and still do retain the most affectionate regard
for you, and Mr. Morris and the family.” On April 4, 1800, Congress passed
the first bankruptcy act of the United States, and on July 1801, a commission
of bankruptcy was issued, upon the petition of John H. Huston, a creditor of
Robert Morris. Four weeks later proof was made of debts amounting to
$3,000,000. At once Morris was released. Next day he wrote, “I obtained my
liberty last evening, and had the inexpressible satisfaction to find myself
again returned to my own home and family.” Early in December following the
proceedings of Bankruptcy were concluded. “I now find myself a free citizen of
the United States,” he said, “without one cent that I can call my own.” Not a stain rests on the name of
Robert Morris. He was unfortunate but he conducted himself throughout his
misfortune in such a way that the honor in which he was held even increased. In
spite of his failure for a sum that was large for those days his record adds to
the glory of Philadelphia business life. 1 An illustration in color of this
vessel will be found in the second volume of “The Life and Times of Stephen
Girard” by John Bach McMaster, J. B. Lippincott Company, 1918. |