- Benjamin E. Bates
Benjamin Edward Bates (1808-1878) was a
New England industrialist, who was the namesake and a founder ofBates College and theBates Mill inLewiston, Maine .Benjamin Bates was born in
Mansfield, Massachusetts in 1808 to Sarah and Elkanah Bates, aYankee farmer, cotton manufacturer and merchant. He attended local schools and the academy in Wrentham from 1823 to 1825. After moving toBoston, Massachusetts in 1829, Bates entered the dry goods business with Barnabas T. Loring on Washington Street. At age 24, he made a public profession of Christian faith, and he was a lifelongCongregationalist andtemperance supporter. Bates taught Sunday school at several churches in Boston includingPark Street Church and was an active member of First Church in Boston.Bates co-founded the firm of Davis, Bates & Turner (later Bates & Turner), which existed from 1833 until 1847. After the dissolution of the firm in 1847, Bates served as president and on the board of several corporations, including several railroads, First National Bank of Commerce in Boston and the Lewiston Water Power Company in
Lewiston, Maine , which built the first canal in the city. Bates was also the largest investor in the Bates Mill in Lewiston, which opened in 1854 and produced textiles into the 21st century.Correctly anticipating that the increasing talk of
secession in the Southern states might eventually lead to a shortage ofcotton (thereby creating a financial opportunity for himself), Bates stockpiled cotton prior to the outbreak of the Civil War. He then made substantial profits by producing uniforms for theUnion Army and other textiles during the War.Bates was the largest of the early donors to
Bates College . He first made substantial donations to the school when it was known at theMaine State Seminary through the Lewiston Power Company. In 1862 he personally pledged $6,000 to the school. Then in 1863 the Seminary's president and founder,Oren B. Cheney renamed the College after Mr. Bates without his knowledge. Bates' donations to the College totalled over $100,000 and he pledged another $100,000 to be paid after his death, but due to the economic recession in the 1870s, his estate was substantially lessened. After his death in 1878, theSupreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts eventually ruled that Bates' heirs did not have to payBates College the pledged $100,000. This left the College financially burdened for several years. Benjamin Bates was buried at theMount Auburn Cemetery on Fir Avenue.Bates College still exists today and is commonly known as one of the "Little Ivies ."ee also
*
Bates College
*List of Bates College people
*Lewiston, Maine References
*Oren Cheney, [http://books.google.com/books?id=SSIEAAAAYAAJ&printsec=titlepage&vq=eulogy "Eulogy on the Life of Benjamin Edward Bates,"] "Bates Student", June, 1878, 131-149, (Muskie Archives and Special Collections Library, Bates College) (part 2).
External links
* [http://books.google.com/books?id=SSIEAAAAYAAJ&printsec=titlepage&vq=eulogy Benjamin Bates Eulogy, pg. 131-149, "Bates Student" 1877-78 (part 2)]
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