Richard Saltonstall Rogers Explained

Richard Saltonstall Rogers
Birth Date:January 13, 1790
Birth Place:Salem, Massachusetts
Death Date:June 11, 1873 (aged 83)
Death Place:Salem, Massachusetts
Resting Place:Harmony Grove Cemetery, Salem, Massachusetts
Nationality:American
Education:Phillips Exeter Academy
Party:Whig
Opponents:Nathaniel Hawthorne

Richard Saltonstall Rogers (January 13, 1790 – June 11, 1873) was an early American shipping merchant and was possibly the inspiration for a character in Nathaniel Hawthorne's The Scarlet Letter.

Early life

Rogers was born on January 13, 1790, in Salem, Massachusetts. He was a son of Abigail (Dodge) Rogers and Nathaniel Rogers. He was educated at Phillips Exeter Academy, from which he graduated in the year 1800.

As a young man, he began to deal in business. Using the influence of his oldest brother, Nathaniel Leverett Rogers, who married the daughter of a prominent businessman in Salem, he acquired large amounts of cargo to be shipped to Russia. He spent several years in Russia, and dealt with the management of the affairs of his sister-in-law's family.

Career

In 1816, he served as the supercargo of the ship Friendship, owned by Waite and Pierce, his sister-in-law's father's company. He traveled to Lisbon, Portugal, and Kolkata, India, along with several other destinations. Following his time on the Friendship, he embarked on one journey upon the Tartar. He then partnered with Nathaniel Rogers and his second oldest brother, John Wittingham Rogers, to form the Rogers Brothers company. Their company employed the ships the Tybee, Clay, Grotius, Augustus, Quill, and Charles Daggett. The brothers pioneered the Zanzibar and New Holland trades, and had their ships collectively travel over 120 times around Cape Horn and Cape of Good Hope. Later in life, he served as supercargo on the ship the Ianthe, and worked with his brother-in-law, W.D. Pickman.[1]

Political career

Rogers was, at certain points of his life, a member of the Common Council of Salem and the Legislature. He however disliked the methods of his colleagues. He was a Whig, and an enemy of the Democratic-Republican, Nathaniel Hawthorne, and was involved with Hawthorne's removal from the Boston Custom House.[2] [3] Hawthorne, in a letter to Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, promised to "immolate" Rogers, along with several other political opponents, if he were successfully removed from his office.[4] It has been suggested that Roger Chillingworth, a character in Hawthorne's novel The Scarlet Letter, was based on Rogers.[5] [6]

Personal life

On May 14, 1822, Rogers married Sarah Crowninshield Rogers, daughter of U.S. Representative Jacob Crowninshield and Sally (Gardner) Crowninshield. They had five sons and a daughter:

After her death in 1835, he married Elizabeth Leavitt Pickman Rogers, daughter of Massachusetts State Senator Dudley Leavitt Pickman, on March 17, 1847, with whom he had:

Rogers died on June 11, 1873, in Salem, at the age of 83. He is buried at Harmony Grove Cemetery in Salem.

Descendants

Through his daughter Elizabeth, he was the grandfather of Sir Dudley Pound, a senior British Admiral during World War II.[11]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Hurd, Duane Hamilton. History of Essex County, Massachusetts: With Biographical Sketches of Many of Its Pioneers and Prominent Men. 1888. J.W. Lewis. 9785873700752. en.
  2. Book: Gale, Robert L.. A Nathaniel Hawthorne Encyclopedia. 1991-01-01. Greenwood Press. 9780313268168. en.
  3. Book: The American notebooks. Hawthorne. Nathaniel. Simpson. Claude Mitchell. 1972. Ohio State University Press. 9780814201596 . en.
  4. Book: Hawthorne, Nathaniel. The Scarlet Letter and Other Writings. 2017. W. W. Norton & Company. 9780393623529. en. Second International Student.
  5. Book: Smith, Julian. Hawthorne and a Salem Enemy.
  6. Book: Edgar Allan Poe's the Tell-tale Heart and Other Stories. Bloom. Harold. Bloom. Sterling Professor of the Humanities Harold. 2014-05-14. Infobase Publishing. 9781438119229. en.
  7. Book: Ellery . Harrison . Bowditch . Charles Pickering . The Pickering Genealogy: Being an Account of the First Three Generations of the Pickering Family of Salem, Mass., and of the Descendants of John and Sarah (Burrill) Pickering, of the Third Generation . 1897 . University Press, J. Wilson and Son . 686, 969 . 7 June 2022 . en.
  8. Book: of 1873 . Harvard College (1780-) Class . The Eighth Report of the Secretary . 1905 . Rockwell & Churchill Press . 43 . 7 June 2022 . en.
  9. Book: Who's who in New York City and State . 1914 . L.R. Hamersly Company . 616–617 . 7 June 2022 . en.
  10. Book: The Eton Register, Part III: 1862–1868. Eton College, Old Etonian Association, Spottiswoode & Co., Ltd., Eton. 1906.
  11. Farrell . Brian P. . Pound, Sir (Alfred) Dudley Pickman Rogers . 2004 . 8 March 2020 . 10.1093/ref:odnb/35587.