Sturgis-Tappan Family

Variant names
Dates:
Active 1812
Active 1982

Biographical notes:

Caroline Sturgis-Tappan at about age 40

William Sturgis was born 25 February 1782, the son of William Sturgis and Hannah Mills. He was a prominent Boston merchant and co-founder of Bryant and Sturgis, and made his fortune in the China Trade. He married Elizabeth Marston Davis and they had six children, among them two daughters, Ellen (1812-1848) and Caroline (1819-1888). Caroline Sturgis married William Aspinwall Tappan, son of Lewis Tappan, a noted abolitionist, and Susanna Aspinwall; they had two children, Ellen Sturgis Tappan and Mary Aspinwall Tappan. Caroline Sturgis Tappan and her sister, Ellen Sturgis Hooper, were minor Transcendentalist poets whose work was occasionally published in the Dial. They counted among their acquaintances William Ellery Channing, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Henry James, and Henry David Thoreau. The sisters, especially Caroline, were also friendly with Margaret Fuller and regularly attended her celebrated "conversations," begun in 1839.

The Tappans lived in Boston and summered in the Berkshire Mountains of Western Massachusetts. In 1936, Mary Aspinwall Tappan and her niece, Rosamond Sturgis Dixey Brooks (Caroline Sturgis Tappan's granddaughter), gave the family's summer estate, Tanglewood, to the Boston Symphony Orchestra.

From the guide to the Sturgis-Tappan Family Papers MS 186., 1812-1982, (Sophia Smith Collection)

Caroline Sturgis Tappan (1819-1888) and her sister, Ellen Sturgis Hooper (1812-1848), were born in Boston to wealthy merchant, William Sturgis and Elizabeth Marston Davis. Ellen married Dr. Robert William Hooper in 1837. Caroline married William Aspinwall Tappan in 1847 and they had two daughters, Ellen Sturgis Tappan (1849- ) and Mary Aspinwall Tappan (1851- ). The Sturgis sisters were minor Transcendentalist poets whose work was occasionally published in The Dial. They counted among their acquaintances Ralph Waldo Emerson, William Ellery Channing, Henry David Thoreau, and Sophia and Nathaniel Hawthorne. The sisters, especially Caroline, were also friendly with Margaret Fuller and regularly attended her celebrated "conversations," begun in 1839. The Tappans lived in Boston and summered in the Berkshire Mountains of Western Massachusetts. Nathaniel Hawthorne wrote much of his novel, The House of the Seven Gables, at the family's summer home, "Tanglewood," which was donated to the Boston Symphony Orchestra in 1936.

From the description of Papers, 1812-1982. (Smith College). WorldCat record id: 49708076

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Subjects:

  • Authors, American
  • Family
  • Family
  • Transcendentalists (New England)
  • Women poets, American
  • Family

Occupations:

not available for this record

Places:

  • New England (as recorded)
  • United States (as recorded)
  • Europe (as recorded)
  • New England (as recorded)
  • Europe (as recorded)