[Rarebooks] Than you sold! F/S Manuscript Ledger Account Book For The Town Of Newburyport Mass 1801-1825
Garry R Austin
austbook at sover.net
Sat Jan 14 18:14:14 EST 2017
Thank You Sold
We offer for your consideration the following, net to all & postpaid @
$250.
From
Austin's Antiquarian Books
PO Box 730
Wilmington, Vt. 05363
mail at austinsbooks.com
802 464-8438
Manuscript Ledger, Expenses And Accounts Of The Town of Newburyport
Massachusetts, March 26, 1801 through March 28, 1825
(No Place: No printer, 1801-1825) Quarto, (13" x 8") unpaginated,
approximately three hundred, (300) leaves, completely filled with the
exception of the last ten leaves; full brown suede covered boards; edge
wear, internally fine and complete; This ledger covers a myriad of town
expenditures. Signatures of the Audit Committee appear throughout the
ledger as they periodically examine and certify the accounts; There is
mention of the Late Timothy Dexter's bequest for the poor. The
Treasurers compiling this Account Book are Enoch Titcomb 1801-1810;
Samuel Tenney 1810-1814, Benjamin Whitmore 1814-1817, Solomon H. Currier
1817-1825, John Porter Esq. 1825; The changing of the Treasurer is done
at Town Meeting always held in early March. There are thousands of
detailed entries in this ledger, as the accounts of the town's business
are settled. The legibility of the entries is extraordinary.
The Town of Newburyport, located in Essex County Massachusetts, was a
part of an area originally called Quascacunquen, referring specifically
to the falls on the Parker River by the Native Americans of the
Pawtucket Nation. The area was initially settled in 1635 as part of
"Newberry Plantation," now Newbury. After several petitions, the "water
side" of Newbury was incorporated by an act of the General Court of
Massachusetts as the separate town of Newburyport on January 28, 1764.
The act was approved by Governor Francis Bernard seven days later.
Located on the southern bank of the Merrimack River, the town was
comprised mostly of merchants, traders, mariners and craftsmen, and
flourished as a fishing, shipbuilding, and shipping center. During the
Revolutionary War, Newburyport imported clothing and military stores for
use by the Continental Army. The town also supported large numbers of
privateers during both the Revolution and the War of 1812.
On May 31, 1811 a fire began in an unoccupied stable and burned for five
hours, destroying most of the downtown. Nearly 250 shops and homes were
destroyed totaling approximately one million dollars' worth of property.
Donations amounting to nearly $130,000 were received from the
surrounding towns, and from as far away as Boston and Philadelphia.
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