Davis, John, 1761-1847

Variant names
Dates:
Birth 1761-01-25
Death 1847-01-14

Biographical notes:

American jurist.

From the description of Autograph letter signed : Boston, to Benjamin Bourne, 1798 May 23. (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 270515963

John Davis (1761-1847), a United States Court judge for the district of Massachusetts, was born on January 25, 1761 in Plymouth, Mass. He received an AB from Harvard in 1781 and an AM in 1784. Davis practiced law and served in state government before being appointed comptroller of the United States Treasury in 1796. In 1801, he began a forty-year tenure as a United States Court Judge for the district of Massachusetts. Davis was a Fellow of Harvard College from 1803 to 1810 and served as College Treasurer from 1810 to 1827. He also served as President of the Massachusetts Historical Society from 1818 to 1843. Davis died on January 14, 1847.

From the description of A plan of Cambridge Green, September 14, 1780. (Harvard University). WorldCat record id: 715099144

Born Plymouth, Mass.

Harvard graduate, 1781.

Mass. bar, 1786.

Appointed by Pres. Adams judge of U.S. district courts, 1801.

Athenaeum founder and trustee.

Pres. M.H.S., 1818-1835.

Gentleman farmer.

From the description of Papers, 1785-1843. (Boston Athenaeum). WorldCat record id: 10497932

On July 18, 1781, Harvard celebrated its first public Commencement ceremony since 1773 when the Revolutionary War interrupted the annual tradition. The Commencement of 1781 occurred at a tense time in Harvard's history: the country was still entrenched in war, Harvard's President Samuel Langdon had been dismissed in August 1780 and his successor Joseph Willard would not be inaugurated until September 1781, and in May and June 1781 the College had been vandalized during riotous behavior by students and members of the local community raising concerns about security during a public event. On June 12, 1781, some members of the senior class unsuccessfully petitioned the Board of Overseers to cancel the public Commencement ceremony, and on July 31st, Harvard Overseer John Eliot (Harvard AB 1772) reported in a letter to Jeremy Belknap (Harvard AB 1762) that he himself had been "very set against a public Commencement, thinking that the consequences would be rather bad as to rioting & wantonness." Plans for the public Commencement continued, however, and the Corporation arranged for two Justices of the Peace and the County sheriff to attend for "the prevention of disorders."

The Commencement occurred peacefully on July 18th, presided over by Edward Wigglesworth, the Second Hollis Professor of Divinity, and attended by the Governor of the newly created Commonwealth of Massachusetts, John Hancock (Harvard AB 1754). The ceremony took place in the Cambridge Meeting House and the Boston Gazette of July 30th noted that the exercises "gave pleasure to a numerous and brilliant assembly of gentlemen and ladies, and evidently show, that amidst the calamities of war, this University has not failed to pay a strict attention to every branch of useful and polite literature."

Among the day's exercises, graduate John Davis had been selected to compose and deliver a poem, and Eliot reported to Belknap in his July 31st letter that "Young Davis, who spoke the poetry is a genius of ye first magnitude. His lines were Vergilian." Davis's verses combined classical allusions with references to the Revolutionary War. Davis also used the public venue to memorialize College leaders who had died during the war years:

Tis her own son, her much lov'd Wadsworth falls Hear faithful sighs return yon distant knell / Ah! painful sighs-- 'tis Eliot's passing bell Scarce for his grave our weeping sires return, / When shrouded Winthrop meets his funeral urn. Dark was the day that gave his dying breath / And dark the night that clos'd his eyes in death. Still it returns--the mournful scenes appear Memory bids weep but Williams check the tear Nor these alone the starting tear demands; War shakes her walls and scatters all her band Loud shouts arise and horrid armour rings Where tuneful Muses spread their peaceful wings Loud thro' her groves the shout of armies runs, And Harvard mourns for her departed sons.

Davis's verse refers to Harvard tutor John Wadsworth (1730-1777; Harvard AB 1762) who died of smallpox on July 12, 1777, Reverend Andrew Eliot (1718-1778; Harvard AB 1737), minister of the New North Church of Boston and Corporation member, who died on September 13, 1778; the second Hollis Professor of Mathematics and Natural Philosophy John Winthrop (1714-1779; Harvard AB 1732) who died on May 3, 1779; and Professor Samuel Williams (1743-1817) who succeeded Winthrop as the third Hollis Professor of Mathematics and Natural Philosophy in 1780.

John Davis (1761-1847), a United States Court judge of the district of Massachusetts, was born on January 25, 1761 in Plymouth, Mass. He received an AB from Harvard in 1781 and an AM in 1784. Davis practiced law and served in state government before being appointed comptroller of the United States Treasury in 1796. In 1801, he began a forty-year tenure as a United States Court Judge for the district of Massachusetts. Davis was a Fellow of Harvard College from 1803 to 1810 and served College Treasurer from 1810 to 1827. He also served as President of the Massachusetts Historical Society from 1818 to 1843. Davis died on January 14, 1847.

From the guide to the John Davis Commencement poem collection, ca. 1780s, (Harvard University Archives)

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Subjects:

  • American literature
  • Accounting
  • Agriculture
  • Authors, American
  • Banks and banking
  • Boston Massacre, 1770
  • Court calendar
  • Solar eclipses
  • Farm management
  • Geometry
  • Indians of North America
  • Judges
  • Judgments
  • Judicial opinions
  • King Philip's War, 1675-1676
  • Law
  • Law
  • Maritime law
  • Law students
  • Mathematics
  • Puritans
  • Surveying

Occupations:

not available for this record

Places:

  • Massachusetts--Cambridge (as recorded)
  • Massachusetts (as recorded)
  • Massachusetts (as recorded)
  • United States (as recorded)
  • Cambridge (Mass.) (as recorded)
  • Massachusetts (as recorded)
  • Massachusetts (as recorded)