Thomas Melvill (American patriot)

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Thomas Melvill
ThomasMelvill Boston.png
Portrait of Melville, ca. 1820s
Member of the Massachusetts State Legislature
In office
1832
Personal details
Born(1751-01-16)January 16, 1751
Boston, Massachusetts
DiedSeptember 16, 1832(1832-09-16) (aged 81)
Boston, Massachusetts
Resting placeKing's Chapel Burying Ground
Spouse(s)
Pricilla Scollay
(m. 1774; his death 1832)
RelationsHerman Melville (grandson)
Children11
ParentsAllan Melvill
Jean Cargill
Alma materCollege of New Jersey

Thomas Melvill or Thomas Melville (January 16, 1751 – September 16, 1832) was a merchant, member of the Sons of Liberty, participant in the Boston Tea Party, a major in the American Revolutionary War, a longtime fireman in the Boston Fire Department, state legislator, and paternal grandfather of writer Herman Melville.[1]

Life and work[]

Melvill was born on January 16, 1751 in Boston, Massachusetts to Scottish-born merchant Allan Melvill (1728-1761) and Jean Cargill (ca. 1730-1759).[2][3] His paternal grandfather, Thomas Melvill was minister of Scoonie, Fifeshire, Scotland.[4]

Melvill was orphaned at the age of 10 and was raised by his maternal grandmother, Mrs. Mary Cargill, a relative of the eccentric Dr. John Abernethy.[4] He intended to become a minister, and attended the College of New Jersey (now Princeton University), from which he graduated in 1769.[5] In July 1773, he was awarded an honorary Master of Arts degree by Harvard College.[6]

Melvill was a close friend of Samuel Adams.[7]

Career[]

"When the citizens of Boston began to evince a determination to resist the arbitrary, offensive and onerous exactions of the British government, Melvill was conspicuous among the ardent and gallant young men of the capital, for his zeal and intrepidity, during that momentous advent of ... national independence."[8]

Melvill participated in the Boston Tea Party, "that immortal band which in December, 1773, in presence of the Royal fleet, boarded the tea ships in Boston harbor, and threw their rich cargoes into the ocean."[8] In March 1776, when "the British fleet was driven from Boston harbor, Captain Melvill discharged the first guns at the hostile ships, from his battery, at Nantasket."[7] During the war he "served in the Rhode Island campaigns of 1777 and 1779."[9]

Thomas Melville house, Green Street, Boston, 1832[10]

Post Revolutionary War[]

After the war, he worked as a naval officer (1786–1820),[7][11] and Surveyor (ca.1796) of the Port of Boston at the Boston Custom House on State Street.[12] (Customs houses were administered by three political appointees: the collector, naval officer and surveyor. These individuals supervised a staff which received cargo manifests from incoming ships, inspected cargoes, assessed customs duties, collected the amounts due for remittance to the United States Department of the Treasury, and fined those who attempted to evade paying the duties. The collector, naval officer and surveyor were paid a portion of the duties and fines they collected, making them lucrative and sought after positions.)[13][14]

"When the custom house was established in Boston, in 1786, he was appointed surveyor; in 1789 was made inspector, and ... in 1814, he was appointed naval officer of the port."[1] He served as a town fireward (1779–1825);,[10][14] and for twenty-five years was chairman of the board;[15] an incorporator of Boston's Scots Charitable Society (1786);[16][17] a founder of the Massachusetts General Hospital (est.1811);[18] and president of the Massachusetts Charitable Society (ca.1825-1826);[19] "He was in the state legislature in 1832."[1] Melvill lived in Boston's West End "in an old wooden house on the south side of Green Street, between Staniford Street and Bowdoin Square. ... It was a wooden house of two stories."[20]

In 1830, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr. published a poem entitled "The Last Leaf", which was inspired in part by Melvill, "the last of the cocked hats."[4] Holmes would later write that Melvill had reminded him of "a withered leaf which has held to its stem through the storms of autumn and winter, and finds itself still clinging to its bough while the new growths of spring are bursting their buds and spreading their foliage all around it."[21]

Death[]

When Major Melvill retired from the fire department, the Columbian Centinel for 31 October 1832 wrote, "his associates presented him with a Silver Pitcher, as a token of personal respect, and a public testimonial of his faithful services." In addition, the younger firemen named an engine for him. When a fire broke out at noon on 7 September 1832, in a brick building on Green Street, opposite the Melvill house, the eighty-one-year-old major responded in character. He was active by "furnishing the firemen with refreshments, having an open house to all of them," wrote the Firemen's Advocate. But in the events he "took a violent cold, which terminated in the diarrhea; and owing to his advanced age, and the violence of the disorder, medicine had no effect in checking its progress."[15] The major died on Sunday evening, 16 September. One of the city's most prominent and colorful citizens, he was mourned and eulogized for weeks. Firemen paid him a meaningful tribute, the Boston Evening Gazette reported on 22 September. "The members of the 'Melville Fire Association,' attached to the Melville Engine, No. 13, met at their Engine House - attended the funeral - and voted to wear the usual badge of mourning for thirty days."[15][22]

Personal life[]

Portrait of Priscilla Scollay Melvill, wife of Thomas Melvill, by Francis Alexander, 1820s

In 1774, Melvill married Priscilla Scollay (1755–1833), the daughter of prominent Boston merchant John Scollay, and sister of William Scollay (1756–1809), a developer and militia officer.[4] Together, Thomas and Priscilla were the parents of 11 children, including:[23]

  • Thomas Melvill (1776–1845), who married Françoise Raymonde Eulogie Marie des Douleurs Lamé-Fleury (1781–1814) in 1802.[23] After her death, he married Mary Anna Augusta Hobart (1796–1884), a widow, in 1815.[23]
  • Mary Melvill (1778–1859), who married John De Wolf (1779–1872),[24] a brother of U.S. Senator James De Wolf.[25]
  • Nancy Wroe Melvill (1780–1813)[24]
  • Allan Melville (1782–1832), who married Maria Gansevoort (1791–1872), the daughter of Gen. Peter Gansevoort, in 1814.
  • Priscilla Melvill (1784–1862),[24] who did not marry.[23]

Portrait[]

Melvill's portrait was painted by Francis Alexander in the 1780s. It is now in the collection of the Bostonian Society, along with a portrait attributed to Benjamin Blyth,[26] and the tricorn hat "said to have been worn by Major Melvill at the Boston Massacre."[27]

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c James Terry White (1901), The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography, J.T. White, OCLC 17692533, OL 20470915M
  2. ^ Copy of the Merchants Petition to the Council March 25th 1760. Boston Evening Post.; Date: 04-07-1760
  3. ^ Boston Gazette, Jan. 26, 1761
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b c d The National Cyclopedia of American Biography Being The History of the United States | As illustrated in the lives of the founders, builders, and defenders of the republic, and of the men and women who are doing the work and moulding the thought of the present time. | Vol. XI. New York: James T. White & Company. 1901. Retrieved 6 September 2017.
  5. ^ Hershel Parker, Herman Melville: A Biography. Volume One, 1819-1852, Johns Hopkins University Press, 2.
  6. ^ Boston News-Letter.; Date: 07-22-1773
  7. ^ Jump up to: a b c Francis S. Drake (1884), Tea Leaves: Being a Collection of Letters and Documents Relating to the Shipment of Tea to the shipment of tea to the American colonies in the year 1773, A. O. Crane, ISBN 9781404726918, OCLC 57263320, OL 20506417M
  8. ^ Jump up to: a b Obituary notice of Major Thomas Melvill. Farmers' Cabinet, 10-05-1832
  9. ^ Drake. 1884
  10. ^ Jump up to: a b Boston Directory. 1823
  11. ^ Boston Directory. 1789, 1823
  12. ^ "Rare Documents and Historic Newspapers". walkingboston.com. Walking Boston. Retrieved 6 September 2017.
  13. ^ Boston Directory. 1796
  14. ^ Jump up to: a b Fleet's register and pocket almanack. Boston: T. & J. Fleet, 1800.
  15. ^ Jump up to: a b c Parker (1996), 76
  16. ^ An act for incorporating certain persons by the name of the Scots Charitable Society. 1785. Acts and laws of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. 1785
  17. ^ "Scots' Charitable Society of Boston website". Retrieved 6 July 2010.
  18. ^ An act to incorporate certain persons by the name of the Massachusetts General Hospital. 1811. Laws of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, from February 28, 1807, to February 27, 1813.
  19. ^ Independent Chronicle and Boston Patriot, September 8, 1824; September 7, 1825
  20. ^ Descriptive catalogue of a map of the town of Boston in 1775. Boston: 1866
  21. ^ Oliver Wendell Holmes (1923), The complete poetical works of Oliver Wendell Holmes, Boston: Houghton Mifflin, OL 23265358M
  22. ^ Sammarco, Anthony Mitchell (1998). Boston's West End. Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 9781439621622. Retrieved 6 September 2017.
  23. ^ Jump up to: a b c d Rollyson, Carl Edmund; Paddock, Lisa Olson; Gentry, April (2007). Critical Companion to Herman Melville: A Literary Reference to His Life and Work. Infobase Publishing. ISBN 9781438108476. Retrieved 6 September 2017.
  24. ^ Jump up to: a b c Parker, Hershel (2005). Herman Melville: A Biography. JHU Press. p. 975. ISBN 9780801881862. Retrieved 6 September 2017.
  25. ^ DeWolf, Thomas Norman (2008). Inheriting the Trade: A Northern Family Confronts Its Legacy as the Largest Slave-trading Dynasty in U.S. History. Beacon Press. ISBN 9780807072813. Retrieved 6 September 2017.
  26. ^ Henry Wilder Foote (1953–1957). "Benjamin Blyth, of Salem: Eighteenth-Century Artist". Proceedings of the Massachusetts Historical Society. Third Series. 71: 64–107.
  27. ^ Bostonian Society. "Catalog". Retrieved 6 July 2010.

Sources[]

Images[]

Further reading[]

  • Oliver Wendell Holmes (1895), The last leaf, Cambridge: Houghton, Mifflin, OL 7249686M. Illus. by George Wharton Edwards and F. Hopkinson Smith.
  • Daniel A. Cohen. Passing the Torch: Boston Firemen, "Tea Party" Patriots, and the Burning of the Charlestown Convent. Journal of the Early Republic, Vol. 24, No. 4 (Winter, 2004), pp. 527–586.

External links[]

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