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Nathan Appleton

 
Biography: Nathan Appleton

As a leading member of the New England mercantile-manufacturing community, Nathan Appleton (1779-1861) was instrumental in shaping sound in stitutions for trade, production, and banking in the early economy of the United States.

Nathan Appleton was born on Oct. 6, 1779, in New Ipswich, N.H. He attended the common schools and the local academy in preparation for college study. At the age of 15 he was admitted to Dartmouth College but decided instead to enter business. He accompanied his elder brother Samuel to Boston and learned bookkeeping in order to work as a clerk in Samuel's mercantile house. When he reached 21 in 1800, he became a full partner in the business, which continued until 1809. In the following year he joined his brother Eben and another merchant, Daniel P. Parker, in a similar venture, which prospered until it was dissolved in 1813.

That year marked Appleton's first move into manufacturing; he invested a portion of his mercantile earnings in a textile manufacturing concern in Waltham, Mass. His copartners were Francis C. Lowell and Patrick T. Jackson. Appleton soon put more capital into the textile business, including the formation in 1821 of the Merrimack Manufacturing Company, which grew into the early industrial town of Lowell, Mass. He and his partners pioneered in developing the production processes, labor system, and distribution methods of the American textile industry. The success of that industry propelled families such as the Appletons, the Lowells, and the Jacksons to positions of great prominence in the New England economic and social world.

Appleton's strong sense of public service led him into a political career during the years in which his business efforts prospered. He was one of two lobbyists chosen by the merchants of Boston to present their views to Congress during the War of 1812, and he served in the Massachusetts House of Representatives for 6 years between 1815 and 1827. He was elected in 1832 as a Whig to the U.S. House of Representatives, serving one full term and a portion of another term 10 years later. In his political life he fought strongly for the principles of high protective tariffs and hard currency.

Throughout his lifetime Appleton actively supported the efforts of the new American nation to establish its economic health and independence. He was a frequent contributor to the public debate on economic issues, writing newspaper articles, making speeches, and publishing pamphlets on money and banking, tariffs, and the need for the development of America's manufacturing sector. As a director of the Boston Bank, he worked toward a conservative, stable banking system, always opposing the inflationary and speculative operations of banks in the backcountry. He was a strong nationalist and a firm believer in Hamiltonian policies for the young nation. Appleton was among the influential men who did so much to shape the basic institutions of the United States prior to the Civil War.

Further Reading

The best source on Appleton is Robert C. Winthrop, Memoir of the Hon. Nathan Appleton, LL. D. (1861; repr. 1969), which contains long sections of Appleton's "Sketches of Autobiography." Also helpful is Kenneth Wiggins Porter, The Jacksons and the Lees: Two Generations of Massachusetts Merchants, 1765-1844 (2 vols., 1937).

Additional Sources

Gregory, Frances W., Nathan Appleton, merchant and entrepreneur, 1779-1861, Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia, 1975.

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Nathan Appleton


Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Massachusetts's 1st district
In office
March 4, 1831 – March 3, 1833
June 9, 1842 – September 28, 1842
Preceded by Benjamin Gorham (1831)
Robert C. Winthrop (1842)
Succeeded by Benjamin Gorham (1833)
Robert C. Winthrop (1842)

Born October 1, 1779(1779-10-01)
New Ipswich, New Hampshire
Died July 14, 1861 (aged 81)
Boston, Massachusetts
Political party National Republican and Whig

Nathan Appleton (October 1, 1779 – July 14, 1861) was an American merchant and politician.

Contents

Biography

Appleton was born in New Ipswich, New Hampshire, the son of Isaac Appleton and his wife Mary Adams. He was educated in the New Ipswich Academy. He then entered Dartmouth College in 1794. However that same year he left college to begin mercantile life in Boston, Massachusetts in the employment of his brother, Samuel Appleton (1766-1853), a successful and benevolent man of business, with whom he was in partnership from 1800 to 1809.

Appleton married Maria Theresa Gold on April 13, 1806. Two months later, he hired the artist Gilbert Stuart to paint portraits of the newlyweds.[1] The couple had five children: Thomas Gold Appleton (1812-1884); Mary "Molly" Appleton (1813-?), who married Robert James Mackintosh; Charles Sedgwick Appleton (1815 -1835); Frances "Fanny" Elizabeth Appleton (1817-1861), who married the poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow; George William Appleton (1826-1827), who died in infancy.

In 1813 Appleton co-operated with Francis Cabot Lowell, Patrick T. Jackson, Paul Moody and others in introducing the power loom and the manufacture of cotton on a large scale into the United States, a factory being established at Waltham, Massachusetts in 1814. The Waltham mill employed the first power loom ever used in the United States. This proving successful, he and others purchased the water-power at Pawtucket Falls, and he was one of the founders of the Merrimac Manufacturing Company. The settlement that grew around these factories developed into the city of Lowell, of which in 1821 Mr. Appleton was one of the three founders. In a pamphlet entitled The Origin of Lowell, Appleton wrote of the mills: "The contrast in the character of our manufacturing population with that of Europe has been the admiration of most intelligent strangers. The effect has been to more than double the wages of that description of labor from what they were before the introduction of this manufacture".[2]

Appleton was a member of the general court of Massachusetts in 1816, 1821, 1822, 1824 and 1827. In 1831-1833 and also 1842 he served in the United States House of Representatives, in which he was prominent as an advocate of protective duties. He was also a member of the Academy of Science and Arts, and of the Massachusetts Historical Society. He published speeches and essays on currency, banking, and the tariff, of which his Remarks on Currency and Banking (enlarged ed., 1858) is the most celebrated, as well as his memoirs on the power loom and Lowell.

Maria Theresa Appleton died of tuberculosis in 1833.[3] Nathan Appleton remarried on January 8, 1839, to Harriot Coffin Sumner (1802-1867), the daughter of Jesse Sumner, a Boston merchant, and Harriot Coffin of Portland, Maine. They had three children: William Sumner Appleton (1840-1903); Harriet Sumner Appleton (1841-1923), who married Greely Stevenson Curtis; Nathan Appleton (1843-1906).

His daughter Fanny married Henry Wadsworth Longfellow in 1843. As a wedding gift, Appleton purchased the house in which Longfellow had been renting rooms, now known as the Longfellow National Historic Site.[4] He paid $10,000 for the home.[5] Frances wrote to her brother Thomas on August 30, 1843: "We have decided to let Father purchase this grand old mansion",[6] which was also a former headquarters of George Washington during the American Revolutionary War. Nathan Appleton also purchased the land across the street, as Longfellow's mother wrote, "so that their view of the River Charles may not be intercepted".[7]

Appleton was also the cousin of William Appleton.

Grave of Nathan Appleton and other members of the Appleton family at Mount Auburn Cemetery

Fanny Appleton died on July 10, 1861, after accidentally catching fire;[8] her father was too sick to attend her funeral. Appleton died the next day, in Boston, on July 14, 1861.[9]

Notes

  1. ^ Tharp, Louise Hall. The Appletons of Beacon Hill. Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1973: 4.
  2. ^ Tharp, Louise Hall. The Appletons of Beacon Hill. Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1973: 103.
  3. ^ Calhoun, Charles C. Longfellow: A Rediscovered Life. Boston: Beacon Press, 2004: 119. ISBN 0807070262.
  4. ^ Wilson, Susan. Literary Trail of Greater Boston. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 2000: 109. ISBN 0-618-05013-2
  5. ^ Calhoun, Charles C. Longfellow: A Rediscovered Life. Boston: Beacon Press, 2004: 167. ISBN 0807070262.
  6. ^ Tharp, Louise Hall. The Appletons of Beacon Hill. Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1973: 239.
  7. ^ Tharp, Louise Hall. The Appletons of Beacon Hill. Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1973: 240.
  8. ^ Irmscher, Christoph. Longfellow Redux. University of Illinois, 2008: 9. ISBN 9780252030635.
  9. ^ Tharp, Louise Hall. The Appletons of Beacon Hill. Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1973: 302.

References

See also

External links

United States House of Representatives
Preceded by
Benjamin Gorham
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Massachusetts's 1st congressional district

March 4, 1831 – March 3, 1833
Succeeded by
Benjamin Gorham
Preceded by
Robert C. Winthrop
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from Massachusetts's 1st congressional district

June 9, 1842 – September 28, 1842
Succeeded by
Samuel A. Eliot

 
 

 

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