1796-1885, undated, predominant 1801-1810
Temporarily located on shelf HGO-02-105-A-B-103 in HAV-01-403
GUSN-359376
This collection contains manuscript materials related to the life and business operations of Boston chairmaker Samuel Gragg, his son Washington Parker Gragg, and other relatives. Materials include financial documents such as receipts, promissory notes, and an account book, legal documents such as a mortgage contract, tax returns, land conveyances, and a summons, and miscellaneous manuscripts. Materials are dated 1796 through1885 with a small number of undated materials. Bulk of materials are dated between 1801 and 1810. Folder titles were assigned by the processor.
financial records
legal documents
receipts (financial records)
promissory notes
mortgages
conveyances
letters (correspondence)
genealogies
business records
account books
tax returns
summonses
subscription
ledgers (account books)
legal notices
contracts
taxes
financial records
receipts (financial records)
legal documents
promissory notes
letters (correspondence)
.42 linear feet (1 Hollinger box; 53 folders)
Finding aid available from Library and Archives
MS067
Samuel Gragg manuscript collection
2014, 2015
MS067
This collection contains manuscript materials related to the life of chairmaker Samuel Gragg, his son Washington Parker Gragg, and assorted relatives. Materials include financial documents such as receipts, legal documents such as a mortgage contract, and correspondence.
Library & Archives Purchase
1796-1885, undated, bulk 1801-1810
Library & Archives purchase, 2014, 2015
Boston (Suffolk county, Massachusetts)
Exeter (Rockingham county, New Hampshire)
Greenfield (Hillsborough county, New Hampshire)
Johnstown (Fulton county, New York state)
Madison (Dane county, Wisconsin)
Malden (Middlesex county, Massachusetts)
Philadelphia (Philadelphia county, Pennsylvania)
Sierra Leone
Londonderry (Rockingham county, New Hampshire)
Gragg, Samuel (American cabinetmaker, 1772-ca. 1855) (Compiler)
financial records
receipts (financial records)
legal documents
promissory notes
letters (correspondence)
Gragg, Samuel (American cabinetmaker, 1772-ca. 1855)
Gragg, Hugh, 1787-1851
Gregg, Samuel
Gregg, Agnes (Smiley), 1743-1803
Campbell, Lucinda
Gragg, Elizabeth (Hopkinson), 1780-
Marsh, Charles
Riley, Joseph
Hutchins, William
Gragg, Elizabeth
Gregg, Rachel (Stewart), 1764-1789
Gragg, Jefferson, 1802-
Gragg, Washington Parker, 1802-1892
St. Paul's Church (Boston, Mass.)
Gragg & Hutchins
Courthouse
Columbian Centinel
Boston (Mass.). Common Council
United States. Office of Patent Classification Systems
Financials
Legal documents
This collection is available for research.
Materials were rehoused for long-term preservation.
Materials are fragile due to age. Numeros materials have existing tears or are friable. Various materials are stained due to age. Collection should be handled with extreme care.
Collection
Temporarily located on shelf HGO-02-105-A-B-103 in HAV-01-403
Accruals are not expected.
No materials have been removed from this collection.
English
Item identification. Box #. Samuel Gragg manuscript collection (MS067). Historic New England, Library & Archives.
This collection was processed by Jordan Meyerl, Archives Cataloguer, 2022.
DACS 2nd edition
Samuel Gragg (1772-1855) was a Boston chairmaker. He was born in Peterborough, New Hampshire, in 1772 to Major Samuel Gregg (1738-1808) and his wife Agnes (Smiley) Gregg (1743-1803). The family's last name is often seen spelled as both Gregg and Gragg, but Samuel Gragg seems to have primarily used Gragg throughout his life and business ventures. It is unknown where Gragg received his training his chair making. In his early twenties, he lived in New York for a period of four to five years until the death of his first wife, Lucinda Campbell.
Following Lucinda's death, he moved to Boston in 1801 at age 29. The same year, he married Elizabeth Hopkinson (1780-). The couple three children: twins Washington Parker (1803-1892) and Jefferson (1803-) and a daughter named Elizabeth. In Boston, Gragg went into business with experienced chairmaker William Hutchins. The pair opened a business called Gragg & Hutchins and worked together until 1808 when Gragg dissolved the partnership. On August 31, 1808, Gragg was awarded a United States patent for what he called a bentwood "Elastic Chair." He ultimately sold the patent for the innovative chair in 1810 to New York chairmakers Charles Marsh and Joseph Riley when it failed to find interest on the market. Gragg worked professionally in Boston for a number of years following this; despite the failure of the elastic chair, he continued to run a successful chair making business. He died on September 21, 1855.
Podmaniczky, M. (Fall 2015). Graggs Wondrous Failure. Historic New England, 16(2), 24.
Podmaniczky, M. (2016). Samuel Gragg and the Elastic Chair. Boston Furniture, 88, 194-195.
The collection is arranged in 3 series as follows:
Series I. Papers of Samuel Gragg, 1796-1846, undated (bulk 1801-1810)
Series II. Papers of Washington Parker Gragg, 1832-1885 (bulk 1830s, 1860-1863)
Series III. Other papers, 1804-1882, undated
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