James Otis Curtis | |
Birth Date: | November 1, 1804 |
Birth Place: | Scituate, Massachusetts |
Death Place: | Medford, Massachusetts |
Nationality: | American |
Occupation: | Shipbuilder |
Parents: | James Curtis & Desire Otis |
James Otis Curtis (November 1, 1804 - March 3, 1890) was an American shipbuilder who built ships in Medford, Massachusetts (up the Mystic River from Boston). He built wooden ships that were either powered by sail or by screw and steam.
Included in the vessels built by Curtis were at least 18 American Clipper Ships, including the first Clipper Ship built in Medford, the Shooting Star, and the largest ship and clipper ship ever built at Medford, the Ocean Express:
Shipbuilding was one of the two major businesses at Medford in the mid-19th century. Thatcher Magoun's shipyard, where Curtis did his apprenticeship, was the oldest and largest of the 10 yards, and remained so even after Thatcher's retirement in 1836. In 1845 one-quarter of all shipwrights in Massachusetts were employed in the Medford shipyards. The yards clustered along 1 mile of the Mystic River riverfront, and Curtis' yard was between Union and Swan Streets. The yards drew upon the ready supply of local timber until the local woods were depleted. Ships were then built from timber cut down and floated south from the hardwood forests of New Hampshire. Each ship was built from fifteen or more species of wood carefully pieced together where the special properties of each would do the most good.
Curtis was the first child and eldest son of James and Desire (Otis) Curtis. He was born on November 1, 1804, at Scituate, Massachusetts. In 1820, at the age of 15, he went to Medford to begin an apprenticeship as a shipwright at the shipyard of Mr. Thatcher Magoun. In 1834 the firm of Curtis and Co. was formed together with Paul Curtis. In the 5 years from 1834 to 1839 they were to build 9 vessels. In 1836 they took over the yard of Thatcher Magoun, to whom they had both been apprenticed, relinquishing the yard to others after their partnership dissolved in 1839. Carrying on business on his own, James Curtis then built another 78 vessels in the next 30 years until retiring from shipbuilding in 1869. Paul Curtis also continued building ships on his own at Medford until 1852, when he moved his shipyard to East Boston. Even though both James Curtis and the elder Paul Curtis shared a surname, and were both born in Scituate, they were not closely related and no link has been found between their families.
The last ship built in Medford, the Pilgrim, was launched in 1873. Just 4 years earlier Curtis had retired from shipbuilding after the launching of the last ship that he built in 1869, but he was still very much involved in his local community.
A civic-minded gentleman, Curtis took great interest in schools including acting as a school commissioner. In 1877 he donated to Medford its only school-bell (in the tower of the Curtis school that had been built in 1877 and named after him), that formerly did service in his shipyard where it rang at the opening and closing hours of daily labor. He also was involved in the Medford branch railroad, and served as a member of the Spot Pond water commission which supplied Medford's water. Curtis was to serve the town of Medford in many capacities. He was the moderator of town meetings for 3 years, a selectman for 7 years, an ardent temperance worker, an assessor for 2 years, and in 1836 for 1 year a representative to the Massachusetts General Court. He was a trustee of Tufts College (now Tufts University) from 1856, and had been president of the Monument National Bank of Charlestown from 1871.
Curtis' first wife Adeline Wait Curtis, whom he had married in 1826, had died in 1858, and they had two children: George in 1827 and Mary Genette in 1831.
Curtis died on Monday March 3, 1890, in the house which he built at the corner of Main and Royall Streets at Medford leaving a widow, his second wife, whom he had married in 1859.