Charles W. Upham Explained

Charles W. Upham
State:Massachusetts
District:6th
Term Start:March 4, 1853
Term End:March 3, 1855
Preceded:George T. Davis
Succeeded:Timothy Davis
Term Start2:1852
Term End2:1853
Predecessor2:David Pingree
Successor2:Asahel Huntington
Term Start4:1859
Term End4:1860
Term Start3:1849
Term End3:1849
Term Start5:1857
Term End5:1858
Office6:Member of the Massachusetts Constitutional Convention of 1853
Term Start6:1853
Term End6:1853
Term Start8:1857
Term End8:1858
Term Start7:1850
Term End7:1850
Birth Name:Charles Wentworth Upham
Birth Date:4 May 1802
Birth Place:Saint John, New Brunswick Colony, British Canada
Death Place:Salem, Massachusetts, U.S.
Nationality:Canadian, American
Spouse:Ann Susan Holmes
Signature:Charles Wentworth Upham signature.png

Charles Wentworth Upham (May 4, 1802 – June 15, 1875) was a U.S. Representative from Massachusetts. Upham was also a member, and President of the Massachusetts State Senate, the 7th Mayor of Salem, Massachusetts, and twice a member of the Massachusetts State House of Representatives. Upham was the cousin of George Baxter Upham and Jabez Upham. Upham was later a historian of Salem and the Salem Witch Trials of 1692 when he lived there.

Biography

Charles Wentworth Upham was born in Saint John in the New Brunswick Colony of British Canada on May 4, 1802 to Col. Joshua Upham, Supreme Court Justice of New Brunswick, and his second wife Mary Chandler. Joshua Upham was born in Brookfield, MA in 1741 and died in England in 1808.

Charles W. Upham married Ann Susan Holmes on March 29, 1826. She was the daughter of Rev. Abiel Holmes and Sarah Oliver Wendell. Ann was the sister of Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr.

Charles and Ann had 15 children all born in Salem, Massachusetts and only four survived to adulthood; Charles Wentworth Upham Jr. born in 1830 and died at the age of 30 in Buffalo, New York, married to Mary Haven, no children; William Phineas Upham born in 1836 and died in 1905, Newton, Massachusetts, married to Cynthia Bailey Nurse and had two daughters (Mary Wendell Upham and Elizabeth Upham); Sarah Wendell Upham born 1839 and died unmarried at 25; and Oliver Wendell Holmes Upham born in 1843 and died in 1905, Salem, Massachusetts, married to Caroline Ely Wilson, one daughter (Dorothy Quincy Upham, b. 1881) and one son (Charles Wentworth Upham, b. 1883).

He attended Harvard in the class of 1821, and was a member of the Porcellian Club.[1] A classmate and former friend of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Upham was an opponent of the burgeoning Transcendentalism movement and later engineered for Nathaniel Hawthorne to be dismissed from his job at the Salem custom house.[2] He also arranged for Jones Very to be institutionalized at McClean Asylum.[3] Senator Charles Sumner once referred to Upham as "that smooth, smiling, oily man of God".[2]

In 1858, Upham was elected a member of the American Antiquarian Society.[4]

Upham died on June 15, 1875, in Salem, Massachusetts.

See also

Publications

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. Catalogue of the Porcellian Club of Harvard University (1857), p. 34.
  2. Baker, Carlos. Emerson Among the Eccentrics: A Group Portrait. New York: Viking Press, 1996: 123.
  3. Richardson, Robert D., Jr. Emerson: The Mind on Fire. Berkeley, California: University of California Press, 1995: 304.
  4. http://www.americanantiquarian.org/memberlistu American Antiquarian Society Members Directory