David Cleaves | |
Birth Date: | September 1, 1794 |
Birth Place: | Saco, District of Maine, Massachusetts, U.S. |
Death Place: | Yarmouth, Maine, U.S. |
Spouse: | Lydia Corliss (m. 1818) |
Resting Place: | Old Baptist Cemetery, Yarmouth, Maine |
David Cleaves (September 1, 1794 – February 13, 1860) was an American potter in 19th-century Yarmouth, Maine. Cleaves Brook and Cleaves Street in that town are now named for him.
Cleaves was born in 1794 in Saco, District of Maine.[1]
He married Lydia, daughter of Ebenezer Corliss, on May 31, 1818. The couple had two sons: Robert C. Cleaves, a potter, and Payne E. Cleaves, a sailor.[2] They lived at a couple of addresses in Yarmouth, Maine, including today's 30 West Elm Street.[3]
In the early 19th century, Cleaves worked for a pottery business owned by his father-in-law and George Bruce. They ran it until 1820,[4] when it was passed to Cleaves and his son, Robert.[5] [6] [7] In 1856, they were in business alongside that of fellow potters Joel Brooks and Benjamin Foster, son of Nathaniel.[8]
Cleaves died in 1860, aged 65. He was interred in the Old Baptist Cemetery in Yarmouth, beside his wife.
Cleaves Street and Cleaves Brook, in the area of Yarmouth today known as Brickyard Hollow, are now named for him. Clay for Yarmouth's numerous potteries were dug from Brickyard Hollow, prior to it being filled in in the 20th century.[9]