From collection Creating Acadia National Park: The George B. Dorr Research Archive of Ronald H. Epp

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Tappan Family
10/23/2018
The Sturgis-Tappan Family Papers, 1812-1982: Collection Overview
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Home >> Sophia Smith Collection >> The Sturgis-Tappan Family Papers, 1812-1982
Sophia Smith Collection
Smith College
Sturgis-Tappan Family Papers, 1812-1982
Northampton, MA
4 boxes (1.25 linear ft.)
XH
Collection number: MS 186
EXIT
SECURITY
Abstract:
SPECIMEN
Authors and Poets. Approximately two thirds of material is correspondence
and the rest is writings and drawings. Includes pencil drawings and
watercolors, drafts of poems, and one published volume. Some biographical
Sturgis-Tappan Family
material.
Papers
Terms of Access and Use:
Restrictions on access:
Browse Finding Aid:
The papers are open to research according to the regulations of the Sophia
> Collection Overview
Smith Collection. Original letters by Ralph Waldo Emerson are in a secure
- Biographical Note
location in the Sophia Smith Collection; photocopies for normal use are in the
- Scope and Contents of
Sturgis-Tappan Family Papers, although researchers may request special
the Collection
permission to examine the originals.
- Information on Use
- Additional Information
Restrictions on use:
- Search Terms
The Sophia Smith Collection owns copyright to the papers of Sturgis-Tappan
- Series Descriptions
family members. Copyright to materials created by others may be owned by
- Contents List
those individuals or their heirs or assigns. It is the responsibility of the
researcher to identify and satisfy the holders of all copyrights. Permission must
be obtained from the Sophia Smith Collection to publish reproductions or
quotations beyond "fair use."
View Entire Finding Aid
Sophia Smith Collection
Smith College
Northampton, MA
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The Sturgis-Tappan Family Papers, 1812-1982: Contents List
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Contents List
Sophia Smith Collection
Smith College
Northampton, MA
COLL
XCI
SERIES I.
(1836-
1982)
BIOGRAPHICAL
EXPIRY
SECURITY
MATERIAL
Family history
Photocopies of pages
1914,
Box 1:
Sturgis-Tappan Family
from various books,
1973,
folder 1
n.d.
Papers
The American
(1957)
Box 1:
Transcendentalists:
(1950)
folder 2
Their Prose and
n.d.
Browse Finding Aid:
Poetryand The
- Collection Overview
Transcendentalists: An
- Biographical Note
Anthology by Perry
- Scope and Contents of the
Miller: photocopies of
Collection
- Information on Use
excerpts,
- Additional Information
Notes taken on the
n.d.
Box 1:
- Search Terms
Tappan family by
folder 3
- Series Descriptions
George McCandlish:
> Contents List
photocopies,
Caroline Sturgis Tappan
1982
Box 1:
and the Grand Tour
folder 4
View Entire Finding Aid
by George Dimock (2
copies),
Account of Lewis Henry
circa
Box 1:
Tappan's first two
1823
folder 5
years (brother of
William Aspinwall
Tappan), by his father,
Lewis Tappan,
Note:
[See Oversize Materials]
Caroline Sturgis Tappan:
n.d.
Box 1:
photograph,
folder 6
Tanglewood: correspondence,
1836-56,
Box 1:
n.d.
folder 7
SERIES II.
(1812-
1913)
CORRESPONDENCE
Caroline Sturgis Tappan
Family
Bigelow, William S.,
n.d.
Box 1:
folder 8
Dixey, Ellen Sturgis
1875-87
Box 1:
Tappan,
folder
9-11
Dixey, Richard
1875-85
Box 1:
Cowell,
folder
12
Goodwin, Ezra,
1828
Box 1:
folder
13
10/23/2018
The Sturgis-Tappan Family Papers, 1812-1982: Contents List
Sturgis,
59,
folder
n.d.
14-15
Hooper, Edward W.
1861
Box 1:
folder
16
?
Sturgis, Susan,
1849,
Box 1:
n.d.
folder
17
Sturgis, William,
1848-50
Box 1:
folder
18
Tappan, Lewis
1861
Box 1:
(combined letter
folder
from Caroline
19
Sturgis Tappan
and Ellen Sturgis
Tappan (Dixey)
[father-in-
law/grandfather,
respectively].
Tappan, Mary
1887,
Box 1:
Aspinwall,
n.d.
folder
20
Unidentified relative,
1849
Box 1:
folder
21
Friends and
acquaintances
Channing, William
Box 1:
Ellery, n.d
folder
22
?
Child, Lydia Maria,
1847
Box 1:
folder
23
Note:
[See also Oversize Materials]
Emerson, Ralph
1838-
Box 1:
Waldo (includes
72,
folder
some
n.d.
24-35
photocopies),
Hawthorne, Sophia,
1842
Box 1:
folder
36
1
James, William,
1882
Box 1:
folder
37
White, Ellen,
n.d.
Box 1:
folder
38
Unidentified
n.d.
Box 1:
fragments,
folder
39
Mary Aspinwall Tappan
Family
General,
1887,
Box 2:
n.d.
folder 1
Bigelow, William S
1888,
Box 2:
1913,
folder 2
n.d.
Brooks, Gorham,
1913
Box 2:
folder 3
Dixey, Arthur Sturgis,
1890-
Box 2:
10/23/2018
The Sturgis-Tappan Family Papers, 1812-1982: Contents List
Note:
[See also Oversize Materials]
Dixey, Ellen Sturgis
1879-
Box 2:
Tappan,
1910
folder
6-7
Dixey, Rosamond
1908-24
Box 2:
Sturgis,
folder 8
Tappan, William
1886-
Box 2:
Aspinwall,
1904,
folder 9
n.d.
Friends and
acquaintances
James, William,
1901,
Box 2:
n.d.
folder
10
Miscellaneous,
1905-32
Box 2:
folder
11
Other family members
Bigelow, William S. to
n.d.
Box 2:
family,
folder
12
Davis, John to William W.
1816
Box 2:
Sturgis,
folder
13
Dixey, Ellen Sturgis
1851-95
Box 2:
Tappan to various
folder
recipients,
14
Dixey, Richard W. to
1859
Box 2:
wife, Rebecca Dixey,
folder
15
Hooper, Anne Sturgis to
1851,
Box 2:
various recipients,
n.d.
folder
16
Hooper, Ellen Sturgis to
1844
Box 2:
William Swain,
folder
17
Sturgis, Ellen M. to Ellen
1815-25
Box 2:
Goodwin,
folder
18
Sturgis, Susan to William
1846
Box 2:
Swain,
folder
19
Sturgis, William to various
1812-59
Box 2:
recipients,
folder
20
Sturgis, William W. to
1822
Box 2:
various recipients,
folder
21
Tappan, Susan A. to
1821
Box 2:
"Mrs. Colonel
folder
Aspinwall" (sister),
22
Tappan, William
1855-
Box 2:
Aspinwall to various
1903,
folder
recipients,
n.d.
23
Third party
Emerson, Ralph Waldo
Forbes, Margaret,
n.d.
Box 2:
folder
24
Peabody, Elizabeth
n.d.
Box 2:
10/23/2018
The Sturgis-Tappan Family Papers, 1812-1982: Contents List
Tappan, William
1845,
Box 2:
Aspinwall
n.d.
folder
(photocopies),
26
Payne, Eloisa,
n.d.
Box 2:
folder
27
SERIES III. WRITINGS
(1849-
59)
AND DRAWINGS
Drawings: Tappan, Caroline
Sturgis
Pencil sketches,
1846-
Box 3:
57,
folder
n.d.
1-2
Pencil sketches and
n.d.
Box 3
watercolor paintings:
album,
Note:
[Located in Box 4]
Poetry
Tappan, Caroline Sturgis:
n.d.
Box 3:
handwritten booklet of
folder 3
poetry with pressed
flowers,
Tappan, Caroline Sturgis
1836,
Box 3:
and Ellen Sturgis
n.d.
folder 4
Hooper (?):
miscellaneous poems,
Note:
[See also Oversize Materials]
"G.W.": "Nebulae,"
n.d.
Box 3:
folder 5
Unidentified author:
n.d.
Box 3:
handwritten book of
folder 6
poems,
Correspondence pertaining to
1849-59
Box 3:
Rainbows for Children by
folder 7
Lydia Maria Child,
Published etchings by various
n.d.
Box 3:
artists of sites in Great Britain,
folder 8
Album of pencil sketches and
n.d.
Box 4
watercolor paintings by
Caroline Sturgis Tappan,
OVERSIZE MATERIALS
Letter to Mary Aspinwall
29 Nov
Flat file
Tappan from Arthur Sturgis
1894
Dixey,
(?)
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10/23/2018
The Sturgis-Tappan Family Papers, 1812-1982: Biographical and Historical Note
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Home >> Sophia Smith Collection >> The Sturgis-Tappan Family Papers, 1812-1982
Biographical Note
Sophia Smith Collection
Smith College
William
Sturgis
Northampton, MA
was born 25
February 1782,
the son of William
Sturgis
and
Hannah Mills. He
APPLICATION
was a prominent
Boston merchant
and co-founder
Sturgis-Tappan
of Bryant and
Family Papers
Sturgis, and made
his fortune in the
China Trade. He
Browse Finding Aid:
- Collection Overview
married Elizabeth
> Biographical Note
Marston
Davis
- Scope and Contents
of the Collection
and they had six
- Information on Use
children, among
- Additional Information
them
two
- Search Terms
- Series Descriptions
daughters, Ellen
- Contents List
(1812-1848)
and
Caroline Sturgis-Tappan at about age 40
Caroline
(1819-
1888).
Caroline
View Entire Finding
Sturgis married William Aspinwall Tappan, son of Lewis
Aid
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.
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10/23/2018
Lewis Tappan papers, 1809-1903 I Library of Congress
LIBBARY
LIBRARY
OF.CONGRESS ATENAL
Lewis Tappan papers, 1809-
1903
About this Item
Title
Lewis Tappan papers, 1809-1903
Summary
Correspondence, journals, autobiographical notes, scrapbook, and other papers
reflecting Tappan's interests in abolition, African American education, religion,
and his business ventures. Subjects include the annexation of Texas; the slave
ship Amistad (Schooner); Tappan's credit-rating firm, the Mercantile Agency
(New York, N.Y.); and the Tappan family. Includes a diary kept by Tappan while
attending the General Anti-slavery Convention, London, Eng., in 1843; and
correspondence concerning organizations and publications with which he was
associated such as the American Bible Society, American and Foreign Anti-
Slavery Society, American Colonization Society, the American Missionary,
American Missionary Association, Liberty Party (U.S.), the National Era
(Washington, D.C.), the New York Journal of Commerce (New York, N.Y.), and
Union Missionary Society (U.S.).
Correspondents include John Quincy Adams, James Gillespie Birney, Frederick
Douglass, Seth Merrill Gates, Jonathan Green, Samuel D. Hastings, William Jay,
Joshua Leavitt, Amos A. Phelps, Theodore Sedgwick, Joseph Sturge, Arthur
Tappan, Benjamin Tappan, John Greenleaf Whittier, and members of the
Aspinwall and Tappan families.
Contributor Names
Tappan, Lewis, 1788-1873.
The Natheriel Hawthorve Review 25 (1999):1-20.
4/24/50 active
Berkshire Quartet:
Hawthornes and Tappans
in
at Tanglewood, 1850-1851
S' file
Richard P. Stebbins
Among the treasures preserved in the Archives of the Boston Symphony
Orchestra is an item with special meaning for persons interested in the
New England literary tradition and the history of the Tanglewood estate,
the orchestra's summer home in the Berkshire Hills of western Massachu-
setts. This item is an autograph letter written on blue note paper, dated from
"The Red House, Sept. 7th, 1851," signed "Nathl Hawthorne," and
obviously addressed to William Aspinwall Tappan, Hawthorne's host and
landlord on the property now known as Tanglewood. Slightly discrepant
from the version printed in the Centenary Edition of Hawthorne's corre-
spondence, the letter seeks to alleviate the sting of a vexatious incident
which occurred during the Hawthorne family's residency in "the little Red
House," a building unremarkable in itself but much celebrated in
Tanglewood annals.
Hawthorne's presence in the Berkshires at the middle of the nineteenth
century was part of the sequence of events that began with the loss of his
position in the Salem Custom House amid the political maneuvering that
followed the election of 1848. Already in his mid-forties, the author of
Twice-told Tales, Mosses from an Old Manse, and a forthcoming novel
entitled The Scarlet Letter had been looking out for a new residence for
himself and his little family-then consisting of his wife, Sophia, and two
young children, Una and Julian-where he could carry on his writing in
more congenial surroundings. One such possibility had been offered by the
New York-bred Mr. Tappan and his wife, a former Bostonian, a minor poet,
and a Hawthorne acquaintance of some years' standing.
The Tappan couple, considerably younger than the Hawthornes, was
mainly renowned for the glittering, somewhat capricious temperament of
its female member rather than the good-natured but painfully modest and
retiring personality of her husband. As a member of one of Boston's
wealthiest and most prominent families, Caroline Sturgis Tappan (1819-
1
1888) had frequented that city's intellectual and literary circles from
earliest youth, becoming a bosom friend of Margaret Fuller, the well-
known feminist writer and lecturer, and a highly prized addition to the
Concord milieu of Ralph Waldo Emerson. Testing her wings as a contribu-
tor to The Dial, the organ of the Transcendental movement, she had also
entered upon a fervidly romantic, even quasi-erotic relationship with the
much older Emerson-inspiring the latter with the determination to find
her a good husband if only to temper her concern with himself.
The Concord sage, in turn, had found an answer to his quest in young
William Tappan of New York-"a lonely beautiful brooding youth who
sits at a desk six hours of the day in some brokerage or other but carries no
desk in his head or heart but wise elastic youth only."2 The son of Lewis
Tappan, a notable financier and antislavery agitator, young William
Tappan (1819-1905) had been raised in the strictest of Puritan traditions
but was more inclined to the imaginative life than to a business career. To
Emerson he had appeared to hold immense promise, even though he had
admittedly not read much, spoke seldom, and might possibly have, in
Emerson's phrase, "a particle too much of phlegm."3 Emerson worked
hard to bring about a meeting between these two promising young people;
but his efforts had been repeatedly frustrated by Caroline's indifference
and William's shyness, and the older man's interest appears to have waned
by the time the couple finally married in December 1847, when both were
twenty-eight.
The year that followed their marriage brought no child but only a work
of children's literature, an illustrated volume of fairy tales entitled Rain-
bows for Children which Caroline had apparently written back in 1845. As
published, the collection bore no author's name but was said to have been
"edited" by Lydia Maria Child, the well-known novelist and Abolitionist
writer. It would be reprinted at least twice in later years, as was a second
collection, The Magician's Show Box and Other Stories, which was
published in 1856, again under Child's nominal editorship and with
attribution to the unnamed author of the earlier book.
The Tappan couple's first human child-Ellen Sturgis Tappan, who
would figure briefly in the Hawthorne story-was born 11 February 1849
in Newburgh, New York, and Caroline's submission to the demands of
motherhood astonished those who had admired her brilliancy but thought
her possibly deficient in maternal feeling. "I thought Carrie, having led
such a wild wood-life, would find the confinement of a nursery irksome,
but it is not SO at all," wrote one observer when little Ellen was six months
old. "She is as much delighted with her baby as she used to be with sky,
earth and sea-clouds, birds and flowers."5
Berkshire Pioneers
Caroline Sturgis was some ten years younger than Sophia Peabody (the
later Mrs. Hawthorne), but the two had known each other in Boston, where
both had frequented the circle grouped around Margaret Fuller and her
literary "Conversations." Caroline had even given Sophia a plaster bust of
Apollo as a wedding present; and the Hawthornes had seen more of her
when living at the "Old Manse" in Concord in the mid-1840s. It would
seem that Caroline actually boarded with them for some days, at a time
when they were short of ready money to pay their arrears of rent; and there
are indications that she also "house-sat" for them on one occasion when
they were obliged to be away from Concord. Nathaniel Hawthorne seemed
well disposed toward his wife's friend at this period. "Do come," he once
wrote her, "to our Eden (as Sophia persists in calling it)-and which, at
least, will be more like Eden if I leave an angel to guard it during our own
expulsion. Acquaintance with Caroline's husband began later, possibly
not until the time when Sophia stayed with the Tappan couple at Lenox in
the Berkshires in September 1849. But Sophia's reaction to her friend's
mate, when it came, was nothing short of ecstatic. Her subsequent letters
overflow with references to Mr. Tappan's "shy, dark eyes
gleaming
with hospitable smiles," his "curls and dark smiling eyes," and his
"Castilian" appearance. In a later description of Dom Fernando, the
regent of Portugal in 1853-1855, Sophia wrote,
I think this prince reminds me of Mr. Tappan. He has the same way of throwing
back his head with clustering hair, and the same earnest look in his dark eyes. But
his eyes are by no means so beautiful and gazelle-like as Mr. Tappan's, nor does his
hair cluster so richly. His dark mustachios and beard also help the resemblance, as
well as the buoyancy of his step.
9
Sophia would find further reasons to value Mr. Tappan's acquaintance
over the next two or three years. But first of all, what were she and the
Tappans doing in the Berkshires in September 1849? The Tappans'
presence in this already celebrated region resulted from another of the
house-lending and house-swapping arrangements SO common among the
literati of the period. With their baby Ellen, the two had come to Lenox
(actually to Stockbridge, though they always referred to it as Lenox)ยน0 as
tenants on the newly created estate of Highwood, the property of still
another of their intellectural friends, Samuel Gray Ward.
Like Caroline Tappan herself, Samuel Gray Ward (1817-1907) and his
beautiful but ailing wife, the former Anna Barker, were art-loving, book-
loving, intellectually active members of the Margaret Fuller-Emerson
coterie and veterans of some of the romantic attachments that had flour-
ished in that favoring climate. Rich enough to be independent of paid
employment, Mr. Ward had left his home in Boston's Louisburg Square in
the mid-1840s to build and occupy the first of the so-called "Berkshire
Cottages," the pleasant country house known then and later as
Highwood-and, in recent years, annexed to the Boston Symphony's
Tanglewood property.
Inspired by the literary and cultural amenities of a region that had
already attracted such figures as the novelist Catharine M. Sedgwick, the
actress Fanny Kemble, and the poets Longfellow and Holmes, Mr. Ward
had undertaken with spectacular success to unite in his own person the
roles of country gentleman, scientific farmer, and active man of letters.
Within a few years he had become, in the words of one leading authority,
"Berkshire's literary gentleman-farmer supreme."
When Mr. Ward was compelled to return to business in Boston toward
the end of the 1840s, it was Mr. and Mrs. Tappan who took his place at
Highwood and, fired by his example, very soon determined to emulate his
cultured life-style. On 5 May 1849, even before their new little daughter
had attained the age of three months, Mr. Tappan purchased outright the
vacant property immediately adjoining Mr. Ward's acres-the property
subsequently known to the world as Tanglewood, though it is uncertain
just when that name became attached to it.
Although the Tappans undoubtedly planned from the first to erect a
suitable building on their new estate, it was for the moment devoid of
living quarters except for a "little garden house" and the small, red-painted
farmhouse which would become famous through its occupancy by the
Hawthorne family. The so-called Manor House of Tanglewood--the later
Tappan family home-was probably built about 1852, after the
Hawthornes had withdrawn from the property in dudgeon. 12 The Tappans
certainly remained at Highwood throughout the Hawthornes' tenancy of
the Red House; and the Hawthornes, for their part, appear to have left no
record of any building activity up to the time of their own departure in late
November of 1851. The sensitive novelist would not have taken kindly to
the invasion of his quiet by the sound of hammers and saws.
It is at any rate clear that no very comfortable dwelling was available
upon the newly acquired Tappan property at the time of Sophia's visit in
Notes
I John McAleer, Ralph Waldo Emerson: Days of Encounter (Boston: Little, Brown,
1984), especially pp. 328-30.
2
Emerson to Margaret Fuller, 23 February 1843, in The Letters of Ralph Waldo
Emerson, vols. 1-6, ed. Ralph L. Rusk (New York: Columbia University Press, 1939),
3:149.
3 Ibid., p. 211; similarly, pp. 130, 156, 286.
4 Ibid., 4:28.
5 George Dimock, Caroline Sturgis Tappan & the Grand Tour: A Collection of 19th-
Century Photographs (Lenox, Mass.: Lenox Library Association, 1982), p. 72, quoting a
letter of 19 August 1849 in the collection of Mrs. Curtis Prout of Dover, Mass.
6
Emerson, The Letters of Ralph Waldo Emerson, vols. 7 & 8, ed. Eleanor M. Tilton (New
York: Columbia University Press, 1990-1991), 8:26-27, 44, and 58 n. 199.
7 Unpublished letter, 13 July 1845, quoted by Eugenia Kaledin, The Education of Mrs.
Henry Adams (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1981), p. 265, n. 21, from the
collection of Mrs. Faith Thoron Knapp of Cazenovia, N.Y "For a person who likes 'marble
talk' as my husband told me the other day, I think the above flight quite uncommon," was
Sophia's comment.
8
Rose Hawthorne Lathrop, Memories of Hawthorne (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1933),
pp. 131, 171.
9 Julian Hawthorne, Nathaniel Hawthrne and His Wife: A Biography, 2 vols. (Boston:
Houghton Mifflin, 1884), 2:98.
10 Both the Highwood and the Tanglewood estates are situated mainly in the town of
Stockbridge but are customarily referred to as being in Lenox.
11
Richard D. Birdsall, Berkshire County: A Cultural History (New Haven, Conn.: Yale
University Press, 1959), pp. 323-30.
12 Carole Owens, The Berkshire Cottages: A Vanishing Era (Englewood Cliffs, N.J.:
Cottage Press, 1984), p. 234. It is difficult to accept the earlier date suggested by an
unidentified clipping in the Boston Symphony Orchestra Archives (probably from the
Berkshire Eagle of Pittsfield, Mass., of late January 1941), reporting the death of Mary A.
Tappan (the Tappan couple's second daughter) and stating that she was born in the same
year that the Tappans' house on the Tanglewood estate was built and the Hawthornes were
in residence. Mary A. Tappan was in fact born in Stockbridge on 15 February 1851, when
the Hawthornes were residing in the Red House; but this writer has found no evidence of
any building activity during their stay.
13 Except as otherwise noted, the narrative from here on relies chiefly on the account of
James R. Mellow, Nathaniel Hawthorne in His Times (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1980),
pp. 317-84, which itself is based largely on Hawthorne's own record in The American
Notebooks. A briefer account is that of Boston Symphony Orchestra historian M. A.
DeWolfe Howe, The Tale of Tanglewood: Scene of the Berkshire Music Festivals
(New York: Vanguard Press, 1946); and some additional details are found in Birdsall,
pp. 353-64,
11/8/2019
BY Bertram Wyatt-Brown
ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF HISTORY
WESTERN RESERVE UNIVERSITY
God and Dun & Bradstreet, 1841-1851
no
the
The curious fusion of business failure and evangelical Christianity that
initiated the United States' largest credit-reporting agency is explored in
this portrait of The Mercantile Agency's founder, Lewis Tappan.
Literature in the nineteenth century began the tradition that
the pious, successful entrepeneur more often than not was a hypo-
crite. Since that period was both the age of growing industrialism
and the last great era of religious revival, the conflicts arising be-
tween the two offered a rich field for satire, indignation, and easy
judgments to anyone wishing to exploit popular suspicions. With
the return of prosperity and complacency in recent post-war years,
criticisms of the tough, self-righteous pioneers of commerce and in-
dustry have softened. But before the old anti-Victorian cliches
passed along from Dickens to Matthew Josephson die out altogether,
it might be useful to review the career of Lewis Tappan, business-
man and reformer of New York City.
I
Oddly enough, the man to establish the nation's largest business
for investigating the moral and financial reliability of individuals
and corporations, the Dun & Bradstreet Company, had to face the
dilemmas of capitalism and religious precept himself in its very
founding.) Born in Northampton, Massachusetts in 1788, Lewis
Tappan was brought up by stern parents to obey the voice of
puritan conscience. Descended from a long but not particularly
distinguished line of Congregationalists, he inherited all the virtues
and some of the defects of the New England character. After
learning the dry goods trade in Boston, Tappan made a comfortable
fortune during the War of 1812, married into the aristocratic
Aspinwall family, and began the climb from rural obscurity to
prominence in Boston society. 1
Business History Review, Vol. XL, No. 4 (Winter, 1966) C The President and Fellows
of Harvard College.
1
See Bertram Wyatt-Brown, "Partners in Piety, Lewis and Arthur Tappan, Evangelical
40, H 4 (Winter, 1966):432-450-
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