Robert Bowne Minturn Explained

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Robert Bowne Minturn (November 16, 1805 – January 9, 1866) was one of the most prominent American merchants and shippers of the mid-19th century. Today, he is probably best known as being one of the owners of the famous clipper ship, Flying Cloud.

Family

Minturn was born to a family long prominent in New England and New York shipping circles. His father was William Minturn (Jr.) (1776–1818); his mother was Sarah Bowne, a descendant of John Bowne. William was "a well-known merchant shipper" and was one of the founders of the Mutual Fire Insurance Company of New York.[1] He is reported to have spent several years in the China trade, where there were enormous profits to be made. He was at various times in partnership with his brother Jonas and in the firm of Minturn and Champlin. After the failure of Minturn & Champlin, he took ill and died soon after, when Robert was in his early teens.

It appears that Robert Minturn's grandfather, William Minturn (Sr.) (born Rhode Island, March 18, 1738; died Newport, Rhode Island, August 23, 1799), was one of the residents of Rhode Island who feared that the British would attempt to re-take their lost colonies after the American Revolution and moved his family and business to New York, believing it would be more protected from seaborne attack. He was one of the founders of Hudson, New York. In 1791 William again moved, this time to New York City, where the opportunities were greater (and shipping distances shorter). Soon he became wealthy: he, his son, grandson, and great-grandson all garnered listings in the Encyclopedia of American Wealth. In 1799, his health failing, William Minturn returned to Rhode Island to retire but he died within the month. His widow (Penelope Greene; born August 21, 1746 - died April 6, 1821, the daughter of Benjamin Greene and Niobe Paul and a third cousin once removed of General Nathanael Greene) returned to New York where she lived among her sons on Pearl Street.[2]

Robert B. Minturn married Anna Mary Wendell (1810-1886) in June 1835. She was the daughter of John Lansing Wendell, a prominent attorney in Albany, New York, and reported to have been involved with Grinnell, Minturn & Co. though Robert joined the firm before his marriage. Anna died in 1886 and left an estate worth about $1 million, today (2020) worth about $1.74 billion in relative output.[3]

Robert's sister Sarah married Henry Grinnell, who later became Robert's business partner.[4]

Career

Robert Minturn received an English education, but he was forced by the death of his father to leave school; at the age of fourteen, he began work in a counting-house. He was received into partnership in 1825 with Charles Green, whose clerk he had been. In 1830, he entered the firm of Fish and Grinnell; his sister Sarah had married partner Henry Grinnell in 1822.

In 1832, the firm was reorganized as Grinnell, Minturn & Co., or simply Grinnell & Minturn. That company was already established in the transatlantic packet trade, but it grew tremendously as Irish fleeing famine led many thousands to emigrate to North America yearly, particularly from 1845 to 1855. When the California "Gold Rush" caused a large increase in traffic to that state, Grinnell & Minturn established a shipping line to serve the market, and bought the Flying Cloud for that line; Robert Minturn actually owned a portion of the ship in his personal capacity. The success of Grinnell & Minturn made Robert Minturn a wealthy man, and his son Robert Jr., joined the firm as well.

Other activities

In May 1848, an overworked Robert Minturn and his wife, sister-in-law, and six children (with servants) took an extended "grand tour" of Europe and parts of the Middle East. They sailed on one of his many packet ships, the Patrick Henry, Captain Joseph C. Delano, first cousin to Franklin Delano Roosevelt's maternal grandfather Warren Delano Jr., the American merchant who made a large fortune smuggling illegal opium into China.

"[The ''Patrick Henry''] was one of the vessels which had so often before carried invalids, or tired clergymen, or young men broken down by study, sent by Mr. Minturn to recruit their strength by a voyage," Robert B. Minturn, Jr. wrote. "He had so frequently done these kindnesses, that the application for them at last became incessant. Sometimes it was for an individual, sometimes for a family of foreigners, who had come to America in search of what they did not find — a living — and were most thankful to be sent back to their homes across the Atlantic."[5] The Minturns took an eighteen-month tour of England, France, Italy, Switzerland, Germany, Jerusalem and Egypt that was said to have inspired plans that led to the creation of New York's Central Park.[6]

In England, Minturn met the poet William Wordsworth and Lord Palmerston, who is remembered, among other endeavors, for evicting 2,000 tenants on his County Sligo estate and financing the cheapest passages possible on coffin ships to Canada on which many died or became sick and died later.[7] Minturn went also to Scotland, from where he took the shortest route to Portrush in Northern Ireland. He visited the Giant's Causeway, which "excited his imagination", and promptly went on to France.[8]

Minturn declined all offers of public office, except the post of the first Commissioner of Emigration, which he accepted, in the newly legislated body in 1847, from "a wish to secure the rights of emigrants." He was an active manager of charitable associations in New York City and was a founder of St. Luke's Hospital. He was the first president of the Union League Club, which was formed when the Union Club membership was divided over support for President Lincoln and the Civil War.

Minturn and his wife donated land for the establishment of New York's Central Park, having been inspired by the beauty of foreign cities and their parks, as seen during his family's trip abroad in 1848–1849. Minturn served as a vice president on the relief committee that eventually sent the Macedonian, June 19, 1847, with supplies to Ireland. He was said to hand out food to the city's growing urban poor, from the front stoop of his New York townhouse before helping found the Association for Improving the Condition of the Poor.[9] Minturn reportedly once noted that the $5 million spent on ship fares in 1847, "substantially reduced the cost of carrying freight" and helped the economy by lowering the price of American cotton and grain for English buyers.

In 1844, Minturn offered Irish Catholic priest and teetotalist reformer Father Mathew free passage in any of their ships to come visit America, which he accepted in 1849, aboard the Ashburton (1842, 1,015 tons), beginning a two-year visit during which he acquired 600,000 followers who took his temperance pledge to treat alcohol abuse, alcohol dependence and alcoholism. Father Mathew befriended Frederick Douglass when Douglass visited Ireland in 1845. The priest wanted to remain singularly focused on helping people stop drinking alcohol and was criticized for not speaking out against slavery and foregoing the abolitionist cause.[10]

In 1848, Minturn provided evidence before Parliament that teetotalism was encouraged by American shipowners as underwriters offered "a return of 10% off the premium on voyages performed without the consumption of spirits."[11]

Like his Quaker forebears, he was an abolitionist reported to have purchased a number of slaves for the purpose of setting them free.[12] He was a benefactor of the Freedmen's Association and a co-founder (with 23 others) of Children's Village.[13]

He bought a 173-acre estate in Hastings, New York in 1857, "Locust Wood," in what is now Zinsser Park. The home was torn down in 1967.[14]

Minturn died suddenly at age 60 in 1866. Fifteen years later (in 1881), his second-born son, John Wendell Minturn, who joined the firm at age 24 and was a principal owner of Grinnell, Minturn & Co with his older brother, died of suicide at 78 South Street, the company's headquarters.[15] John was 42 years old. Donated lands of the family estate in Hastings, New York, were instrumental in the development of an 184-acre retreat, children's home and school in the 1890s that no longer exists.[16] Robert Bowne Minturn's granddaughters were immortalized in an 1899 miniature oil painting held by the New-York Historical Society.

Descendants

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. http://www.popenoe.com/NYfamilies/minthorn.htm Minthorn family history
  2. Poppino/Popenoe/Popnoe & Allied Families; https://web.archive.org/web/20060219075420/http://www.popenoe.com/NYfamilies/minthorn.htm. Wayback Machine, Accessed January 2021.
  3. [New York Times]
  4. Poppino/Popenoe/Popnoe & Allied Families; [www.popenoe.com/Minturn-RI.htm II: The Rhode Island/NYC Minturns], No. 1143. August 2007.
  5. Memoir of Robert Bowne Minturn. New York: Anson D, F. Randolph & Co., 1871, p. 65. Internet Archive.
  6. Rosenzweig & Blackmar. The Park and the People: A History of Central Park. Cornell University Press, 1992
  7. Scientists identified remains on the Canadian coast in 2019 thought to be former tenants. Irish America. The Unquiet Ghosts of the Carricks. Washington Post, June 13, 2019. A storm exposed children's bones on a Canadian beach, reviving a 170-year-old mystery. See also: Abandoned Ireland. Mount Temple House, Co. Sligo. Documenting our Heritage
  8. Memoir of RBM, 75. Internet Archive.
  9. O'Malley, Brendan P. Protecting the Stranger: The Origins of US Immigration Regulation in Nineteenth-Century New York. Thesis, Graduate Center, City University of New York, 2015.
  10. For more, see: "History's Backstory: Douglass and O'Connell," Irishphiladelphia.com, May 27, 2011. Also: Ignatiev, Noel. How the Irish Became White. United Kingdom, Routledge, 1995.
  11. Clark, Arthur H. The clipper ship era: An epitome of famous American and British clipper ships, their owners, builders, commanders, and crews, 1843–1869. New York: G.P. Putnam's sons, 1910, p. 109
  12. Kelley, Rev. Edmond, A Family Redeemed From Bondage; Being Rev. Edmond Kelley, (the Author,) His Wife, and Four Children. New Bedford, Massachusetts,
  13. News: OUR CITY CHARITIES—NO. II.; The New-York Juvenile Asylum.. New York Times. January 31, 1860. November 21, 2015.
  14. Robert Bowne Minturn. https://ghgraham.org/robertbowneminturn1805.html. Accessed January 16, 2021. See also, The Hastings Historical Society. The Beautiful Suburb of Hastings. https://hastingshistoricalsociety.org/village-history/
  15. New York Times, May 1, 1881. Finding Relief in Suicide.
  16. Mount Minturn. The Churchman, June 3, 1893.