Phineas Cook Dummer | |
Birth Date: | 28 October 1797 |
Birth Place: | New Haven, Connecticut |
Death Place: | Jersey City, New Jersey |
Residence: | Jersey City, New Jersey |
Office: | Mayor of Jersey City |
Order: | 6th |
Term Start: | April, 1844 |
Term End: | April 20, 1848 |
Predecessor: | Peter Bentley, Sr. |
Successor: | Henry C. Taylor |
Party: | Whig |
Spouse: | Eliza Dobbs Holt |
Phineas Cook Dummer (October 28, 1797 – September 14, 1875) was the sixth mayor of Jersey City in New Jersey. He succeeded Peter Bentley, Sr. A Whig politician, he served four one-year terms from April 1844 to April 20, 1848.[1] He was succeeded by Henry C. Taylor.
Born in New Haven, Connecticut, in 1787, he served in the New York Militia during the War of 1812. Dummer married Eliza Dobbs Holt, daughter of New London, Connecticut, newspaper editor Charles Holt, on September 21, 1821, and they moved to Jersey City in 1824.
Dummer joined his brother George Dummer's Jersey Glass Company on Washington Street between Essex Street and the Morris Canal in Paulus Hook (later became incorporated as Jersey City). He later obtained a patent for the manufacture of pressed glass by a process called "Dummer's scallop or coverplate." By 1840s the glass company was known as P.C. Dummer & Company and was selling glassware for home, decorative and commercial use. The company went out of business after the economic downturn following the Civil War.
After serving as mayor, Dummer served as Chief of the Fire Department in 1850.
After his company went out of business, Dummer was elected City Collector of Taxes, and afterwards appointed Deputy collector of customs of the Port of New York, by Abraham Lincoln and re-appointed under Ulysses S. Grant. He held the position until his death on September 14, 1875, in Jersey City, New Jersey.[2]