1796-1846, undated, predominant 1801-1810
GUSN-359456
Series contains receipts, including an 1810 receipt documenting the sale of Gragg's chairs in Sierra Leone, Africa; an account ledger; a summons; letters; a mortgage contract; promissory notes; a creditor's notice; and miscellaneous manuscripts related to the household and business operations of Samuel Gragg.
legal documents
financial records
promissory notes
receipts (financial records)
ledgers (account books)
contracts
summonses
legal notices
letters (correspondence)
subscription
account books
taxes
financial records
legal documents
receipts (financial records)
promissory notes
letters (correspondence)
37 folders
MS067
Samuel Gragg manuscript collection
2014, 2015
MS067.001
1796-1846, undated (bulk 1801-1810)
Boston (Suffolk county, Massachusetts)
Exeter (Rockingham county, New Hampshire)
Johnstown (Fulton county, New York state)
Philadelphia (Philadelphia county, Pennsylvania)
Londonderry (Rockingham county, New Hampshire)
Sierra Leone
Greenfield (Hillsborough county, New Hampshire)
Madison (Dane county, Wisconsin)
Gragg, Samuel (American cabinetmaker, 1772-ca. 1855) (Compiler)
financial records
legal documents
receipts (financial records)
promissory notes
letters (correspondence)
Gragg, Samuel (American cabinetmaker, 1772-ca. 1855)
Gragg, Hugh, 1787-1851
Columbian Centinel
St. Paul's Church (Boston, Mass.)
Courthouse
Gragg & Hutchins
Financials
Legal documents
Series
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.
Arranged chronologically, and thereunder alphabetically.
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