William Jackson (Saugus, Massachusetts) Explained

William Jackson
Birth Place:Manchester, England
Death Date:March 5, 1829
Death Place:Saugus, Massachusetts, U.S.
Member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives from Saugus
Term Start:1827
Term End:1828
Predecessor:John Shaw
Successor:Abijah Cheever

William Jackson was an English-American pottery manufacturer and politician from Saugus, Massachusetts.

Pottery manufacturing

Jackson arrived in Saugus (then part of Lynn) from Manchester, England in 1808 and bought a small farm and part of a meadow that would become known as "Jackson's Meadow". Jackson found a deposit of fine clay on his land. Jackson sought to use his clay to make earthenware crockery. He constructed a plant consisting of one large building and two smaller ones and procured the best equipment and workmen available. Production began in 1811, however, he soon found that the clay could only be used to make common redware, not the fine kind of ware he had hoped to make. The factory continued for four years, but became unprofitable and was abandoned.[1] [2]

Politics

In 1814, Jackson was a signer of a petition that requested that Lynn's Second Parish be set off as a separate town known as Westport.[3] The plan was abandoned, however the following year the Second Parish separated from Lynn and became the Town of Saugus. Saugus' first Town Meeting was held on March 13, 1815, and Jackson was elected Saugus' first Town Moderator.[4]

In 1827 and 1828, Jackson represented Saugus in the Massachusetts House of Representatives.[5]

Personal life

Jackson married Mary Stocker Stanford on January 10, 1809.[6] Their son, Pickmore Jackson, also served as a state representative from Saugus. Jackson died on March 5, 1829.[7]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Watkins, Lura Woodside. Early New England potters and their wares. 1968. Archon Books.
  2. Book: History of Essex County, Massachusetts: With Biographical Sketches of Many of Its Pioneers and Prominent Men, Volume 1. 1888. J. W. Lewis & Company. Duane Hamilton Hurd. April 2, 2013. 413–414.
  3. Book: Atherton, Horace H.. History of Saugus, Massachusetts. 1916. Citizens Committee of the Saugus Board of Trade. 82.
  4. Book: Atherton, Horace H.. History of Saugus, Massachusetts. 1916. Citizens Committee of the Saugus Board of Trade. 93.
  5. Book: History of Essex County, Massachusetts: With Biographical Sketches of Many of Its Pioneers and Prominent Men, Volume 1. 1888. J. W. Lewis & Company. Duane Hamilton Hurd. April 2, 2013. 394.
  6. Book: Vital Records of Lynn, Massachusetts, to the End of the Year 1849: Marriages and deaths. 1906. Essex Institute. 355.
  7. Book: Vital Records of Saugus to the end of the Year 1849 . 1907 . The Essex Institute . Salem, MA . 74 . 29 November 2023.