Correspondence relating to the personal life and manufacturing career of John Slater. Includes letters documenting the establishment, operation, and expansion of his yarn company in Slatersville (originally Smithfield), Rhode Island. Subjects include labor issues (e.g., wages, hiring, etc.) and technical questions (e.g., water looms, aqueduct, etc.)
From the guide to the John Slater papers, Slater (John) papers, 1804-1846, (John Hay Library)
Sarah Fisher Ames was a Boston artist known for her busts of Abraham Lincoln and Governor John A. Andrew of Massachusetts. Her work for the cause of the Union during the Civil War was personally acknowledged by President Lincoln. Widow of portrait and genre artist, Joseph Alexander Ames (1816-1872). Her daughter was a musician and her son, F.R. Ames, was captain of the 8th infantry in Cuba
From the guide to the Sarah Fisher Ames papers, Ames (Sarah Fisher) papers, 1860-1879, (Brown University Library Special Collections)
Blanche E. Williams was the sister of Alan R. Wheeler (class of 1901) and niece of Mary C. Wheeler, founder of the Wheeler School in Providence. Mrs. Williams taught at the Wheeler School for several years prior to 1901.
Mrs. Williams was one of the co-authors of a book on her 1901 trip to Crete, entitled Gournia, Vasiliki and other prehistoric sites of the isthmus of Hierapetra, Crete; excavations of the Wells-Houston-Cramp expeditions, 1901, 1903, 1904. Philadelphia: 1908, by Harriet Boyd Hawes, Blanche E. Williams, Richard B. Seager, Edith H. Hall, and American Exploration Society
Mrs. Williams is known to have published one other book, a biography of her aunt, Mary C. Wheeler, in 1934.
From the guide to the Blanche E. Williams papers, Williams (Blanche E.) papers, 1901, (bulk 1901), (Brown University Library Special Collections)
Usher Parsons (1788-1868), professor of anatomy and surgery in the early medical school, was born in Alfred, Maine, on August 18, 1788. He attended the village school and worked on his father’s farm, and in 1800 attended Berwick Academy for about a year. He worked in stores in Portland and Wells, and in 1807 began the study of medicine with Dr. Abel Hall of Alfred.
His studies did not progress as quickly as he wished, so he decided on a return to medicine and in or about July 1811 began his studies with Dr. John Warren of Boston. On February 7, 1812, he was licensed as a Practitioner of Medicine. In July 1812, through the good offices of Josiah Bartlett, congressman from New Hampshire, Parsons received a commission as surgeon’s mate in the navy. In the winter and spring of 1812-13, he found himself at Black Rock, near Buffalo, in charge of the sick and wounded, many of whom were felled by an epidemic of pleuro-pneumonia, about which he wrote an article for a Buffalo newspaper. He joined Commodore Oliver Hazard Perry’s expedition on Lake Erie, which met the enemy on September 10. On this occasion he acquired a great deal of medical experience, as the two other surgeons were confined by illness.
He was promoted to the rank of surgeon on April 15, 1814. During 1815 and 1816 he was attached to the frigate Java under Commodore Perry, which served in the Mediterranean, and returned to Newport in March 1817, bearing a new treaty with Algiers and eighteen mild cases of smallpox, which Parsons had induced through inoculation with the small pox virus to prevent more serious illness. In July 1817 Parsons came to Providence and boarded with Major Samuel McClellan. In November of that year he began attending lectures at the medical school in Boston, and in March 1818 he received an M.D. degree from Harvard, having written his dissertation on “the epidemic pneumonia of 1812-1813, as it appeared about Lake Erie.” His travels as surgeon of the frigate Guerrière took him to Russia and Italy, where he left the ship and went on to Paris and London to attend medical lectures and visit hospitals.
In 1820 Parsons was named professor of anatomy and surgery at Dartmouth, and lectured there for a year. Moving to Providence in April 1822, he entered into medical practice with Dr. Levi Wheaton and was appointed professor of anatomy and surgery at Brown. He lectured to both medical students and undergraduates at the college, but left as a result of President Wayland’s newly instituted requirement that all professors occupy rooms in the college during the hours of study. After the death of his wife in 1825, he boarded with McClellan until 1831. In 1832 he built an office on Waterman Street. For many years he took his meals at boarding houses and slept at the office. He had an extensive practice and wrote on medical subjects, and other diverse topics, such as the Battle of Lake Erie, early Rhode Island physicians, and Indian place names. He died in Providence on December 19, 1868.
From the guide to the Usher Parsons papers, Parsons (Usher) papers, 1812-1873, (bulk 1831-1873), (Brown University Library Special Collections)
Role | Title | Holding Repository | |
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creatorOf | Usher Parsons papers, Parsons (Usher) papers, 1812-1873, (bulk 1831-1873) | Brown University Library, Special Collections | |
creatorOf | John Slater papers, Slater (John) papers, 1804-1846 | John Hay Library | |
creatorOf | Blanche E. Williams papers, Williams (Blanche E.) papers, 1901, (bulk 1901) | Brown University Library, Special Collections | |
creatorOf | Sarah Fisher Ames papers, Ames (Sarah Fisher) papers, 1860-1879 | Brown University Library, Special Collections |
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associatedWith | Hawes, Harriet Boyd, 1871-1945 | person |
associatedWith | Parsons, Charles W. (Charles William), 1823-1893 | person |
associatedWith | Parsons, Usher, 1788-1868 | person |
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