- Thomas Handasyd Perkins
Colonel Thomas Handasyd Perkins, or T. H. Perkins (
December 15 ,1764 -January 11 , 1854) was a wealthyBoston merchant and an archetypicalBoston Brahmin . Starting with bequests from his grandfather and father-in-law, he amassed a huge fortune. As a young man he was a slave trader inHaiti , a merchant trading furs from the American Northwest toChina , and then a major smuggler of Turkishopium into China.His parents, James Perkins and Elizabeth Peck, had ten children in eighteen years. When Perkins was twelve, he was in the crowd which first heard the Declaration of Independence read to the citizens of Boston. The family had planned to send Perkins to
Harvard College , but he had no interest in a college education. In 1779 he began working, and in 1785 when he turned 21 he became legally entitled to a small bequest that had been left to him by his grandfather Thomas Handasyd Peck, a Boston merchant who dealt largely in furs and hats.In 1785, when
China opened the port of Canton to foreign businesses, Perkins became one of the first Boston merchants to engage in theChina trade . He sailed on the Astrea to Canton in 1789 with a cargo including ginseng, cheese, lard, wine, and iron. On the trip back it carried tea and cotton cloth. In 1815 Perkins and his brother James opened a Mediterranean office to buy Turkish opium for resale in China.Perkins was also a major industrial investor within Massachusetts. He owned the
Granite Railway , the first commercial American railroad, which was built to carry granite from Quincy quarries to Charlestown for construction of theBunker Hill Monument and other city buildings in Boston. He also held significant holdings in the Elliot textile mills in Newton, the mills at Holyoke and Lowell, New England canals and railroads, and lead and iron mines including the Monkton Iron Company inVermont . In addition, Perkins was politically active in theFederalist party, serving terms as state senator and representative from 1805-1817.In later years Perkins became a philanthropist. In 1826, he and his brother, James Perkins, contributed half the sum of $30,000 that was needed for an addition to the
Boston Athenaeum , and the old Boston Athenaeum Gallery of Art was moved to James Perkin's home. ThePerkins School for the Blind , still in existence inWatertown, Massachusetts , was renamed in his honor after he donated his Boston mansion to the financially troubled "Massachusetts Asylum for the Blind" in 1832. He was also a major benefactor to the Boston Museum of Fine Arts,McLean Hospital , and helped found theMassachusetts General Hospital .Upon retirement, Perkins built a summer home on Swan Island in the
Kennebec River nearRichmond, Maine . He helped the island achieve independent municipal status by paying legal fees for its charter and the town was renamed Perkins in gratitude. It is now Perkins Township, aghost town . Colonel Perkins died on January 11, 1854 inBrookline, Massachusetts , and is buried in the family plot atMount Auburn Cemetery .Perkins married Sarah "Sally" Elliott (1768-February 25, 1852) on March 25, 1788, in Boston, Massachusetts. They had three children: Colonel
Thomas Handasyd Perkins, Jr. ("Short-arm Tom"), whose daughter Louisa married the Boston painterWilliam Morris Hunt [ [http://books.google.com/books?id=WLfMU4yd1FYC&pg=PA421&lpg=PA421&dq=dwight+leavitt&source=web&ots=I935DS2rWX&sig=oG1VlU3201UX1CscT2TcLmpntxU&hl=en#PPA408,M1The History of the Descendants of John Dwight of Dedham, Mass., Benjamin Woodbridge Dwight, J.F. Trow & Co., New York, 1874] ] ] ; Elizabeth Perkins Cabot (1791-1885); and Caroline Perkins Gardiner (1800-1867). His nephewJohn Perkins Cushing was active in Perkin's China business for 30 years; the town ofBelmont, Massachusetts is named for his estate. His great nephewCharles Callahan Perkins became a well known artist, author and philanthropist like his grandfather James Perkins.References
* Thomas G. Cary, "Memoir of T. H. Perkins", 1856.
* Carl Seaburg and Stanley Paterson, "Merchant Prince of Boston. Colonel T.H. Perkins, 1764-1854", 1971.
Footnotes
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