,0 ^ * o » o ' -?,> ' • • s \ ' •^•^^ ^J>'7 "^ - • /^^^ - -^ o • » " .0 ■, \'' ^^. J> v\^ <^ o ^oV^ vP b 0* s^ O > ■b. *rr,.^ ,0 o. »Tr,*' ,0- '^. BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH, PERSONAL AND DESCRIPTIVE, SYLVANUS B. PHINNEY, OF BARNSTABLE, MASS., ON HIS EIGHTIETH ANNIVERSARY. October 27, 1888. REPRINT FROM THE OLD COLONY RECORDS BY RELATIVES AND FRIENDS. BOSTON: RAND AVERY COMPANY, PRINTERS. 1888. CO:N'TE]SrTS. Introductory Letter from Rev. E. E. Hale 5 Preface 9 Biographical Sketch 13 Introductory Remarks 17 Timothy Phinney 18 An Interesting Relic 20 Old Middlesex and the Old Colony 22 Personal Sketches 25 Isaiah L. Green 28 Official Letter to Major-Gen. Dearborn .... 29 An Old Document 31 Letter of John Adams 34 Valuable History 35 Letter of Amos Otis 36 Important Letter relating to the Fisheries 39 Speech of Major Phinney at Hyannis, May, 1885 ... 41 President Grant's Visit to Barnstable in 187G .... 47 Historical Letter 49 Speech of Major Phinnt;y at Semi-Centennial of Faneuil- Hall Market, 1876 55 The First Cunard Steamer 58 Monttment at Provincetoavn 61 The First Landing of the Pilgrims 63 Monument to the Pilorims 63 Cape Cod : Response of Major Phintiey 72 Kew-England Excursionists to California in 1880 . . 74 A Pleasant Visit 84 Agricultural : Letter from Major Phinney 85 Unitarian Conference : Address of Major Phinney . . 89 Valedictory 93 '-~>^ J^^\,.y^U::^^'¥::-. i:^TEODUCTORT LETTER. RoxBURY, Sept. 26, 18S8, My DEAR Major Phinney, — I am very glad to hear tliat, while you are strong and well, something is to be published which we can call your "memoirs," or your "contributions to the history of our time." Certainly your outlook upon that history has been a very curious one ; and when the ac- count of the nineteenth century in New England is made up, just what will be needed are such notes as you are able to give, with regard to the marvellous changes which have passed over New England since the year in which you were born. I am glad to be permitted to say, in some part of the book, that some of my earliest happy associations are connected with you. I can remember, — what perhaps you do not re- member, — what wonder and pleasure I had in the walks in Boston, between the head of School Street and the corner of State and Congress Street, when my little hand reached up to take your hand, and when I should not have been permit- ted to stray into the streets alone. Indeed, my first associa- tion with a world larger than the nursery is connected with " Sylvanus," as we used to call you in those days ; and from that hour to this, the name "Sylvanus," and, strange to say, the name "Sylvester," has always been to me a pleasant name. I owe it to you, that I have always tried to make out the popes of the name of Sylvester a better series of popes than the general series which surrounded them. If any of them take any comfort from my good opinion, they owe it to you. I was glad to hear you say that your recollections of the old "Advertiser" office were pleasant. My father was a man b INTRODUCTORY LETTER. of his time ; indeed, in many respects lie led the men of his time, when they did not kno\y that he was leading them. But he had an attachment to the best of the old systems. In par- ticular, he always believed in the system of apprenticeship. I have heard him say a hundred times that he wanted to have two or three apprentices in his office. " They are always loyal," he said ; and that is true. The apprentices in his employ have in many instances, notably in j'our own, grown up to be leaders of the societj- in which they lived, honorable and respected men. He always took a personal interest in their fortunes, and in their after-life would speak proudly of their having begun their training for life in his office. It would be to go back a few years before you were in the office, to tell the story which my mother was fond of telling, of the work in which the " Advertiser's " report of the Con- stitutional Convention of 1820 was finished. Mr. Webster, Judge Story, ]Mr. Pickering, and other older men, leaders of the convention, used to meet every evening, after the day's work, in my mother's little parlor, in the house on Tremont Street, where the new extension of the Parker House now stands. My father was a member of the convention, and practically was its reporter. They would write out and re- vise their speeches there, and the apprentices from the office would be in waiting to receive the slips of copy in the even- ing. I have heard her say that she had rocked the cradle with the baby in it, while she wrote from the dictation of one or other of the gentlemen whom I have named. The boys waiting for copy would sit at one side, with some book which she had given them for their entertainment. When the whole was over, and the convention record was printed as a volume, she made a plum-cake for the office, and frosted it, and dressed it with the old-fashioned cockle-shells which you will remember as favorites among the " sugar-plums " of that day. But she took out the printed mottoes which came from the confectioners, and substituted passages from the speeches of the leaders of the convention. This cake was sent down to the office, to make a pleasant wind-up for the INTRODUCTORY LETTER. 7 tediousness of the long " waits " as the daily reports went into type. In after-days, our home associations with Barnstable were all connected with yourself. I dure say you liave forgotten, but I have not, that you and Mrs. Phinney interested your- selves in the ladies' movement for the completion of Bunker Hill Monument, which began, I think, about the, year 1835. But indeed, my dear Major Phinney, you know perfectly well, though you will be too modest to say so, that you have interested yourself in every good thing which has been done in the Old Colony from the time when the English took you as a prisoner down to this present day. Believe me Very truly and affectionately yours, EDWARD E. HALE. PEEFAOE. According to an old legend, there was said to be a fountain somewhere in the New World, that would impart perpetual youth to all who should drink of its waters. An old Spaniard set off in search of the same. It was supposed to exist in one of the Bahama Islands. In the search he accidentally discovered the coast of Florida, which received its name from the abundance of flowers with which its forests were adorned. There is a great art in knowing how to make our life, as it advances, more joyous and serene. The old Norse vigor of our ancestors came largely in this way. Age is the period for rest, retrospection. In the library of Harvard College, with its more than three hundred thousand volumes, our attention has been repeatedly called to the fact of the large number of biographies and autobiographies of distinguished individuals. None are read with greater avid- ity than those of self-made men, who have risen to greatness without even knowing or caring for greatness, — men who have dared to speak and act according to their*-honest con- victions, without the fear or favor of others. While, in many cases, histories and biographies, written many years after the events have taken place, are full of errors and mis-statements, and therefore pushed aside, what has taken place and been recorded under one's own eye is eagerly sought after. During the long and eventful life of our distinguished fellow-citizen, there are so many things of the greatest interest to the public, that it is difficult to know where to begin or to leave off. As a journalist, he was deservedly among the first. As a politician, he has done more to shape the opinions of this 10 PREFACE. section of the State than perhaps any other resident on the Cape for the hxst half-century ; and he has held positions of the highest trust and influence. He has been president and director of a score of different organizations, such as banks and railroads, and represented the people in the Constitu- tional Convention in 1853 ; has been on committees of high importance at Washington, and had immediate interviews with Presidents and highest officials of the land. During the recent war of the Rebellion he was always dis- tinctly^ heard on the side of Union, loyalty, and humanity. His residence, grounds, and surroundings are in perfect taste and accord with the uniform cheer and hospitality which reigns within his delightful home. In the church he has been a pillar of strength, — giving liberally, not only of his time and sympathy, but of his money. He has been the prime mover in organizing the Cape Cod Conference of Uni- tarian and other Liberal Christian churches in this section of the Old Colony, and been continued as its president for the past twenty years. A self-made man, never dismaj^ed by obstacles, and he has never been known to show the " white feather." As a critic his pen has af times been cutting, no doubt, but he has met the sharpest darts of his foes with the utmost equanimity and charity. What might seem fulsome, in this connection, to say of many another, in Ids case is simply justly his due. What all men say of him, irrespective of party or social position, must be true. "Vox populi, vox Dei." In these days of transition and party revolution, it is refreshing to know, here and there, of a man who has stood firm to the associations and established rules of his early manhood; modifying and changing ever so much, it may be, his methods, yet progressing ever in the line of his deepest convictions and honest opinions from the wevj first. His colors once nailed to the mast-head, you always know where to find such a man. You may call him a Democrat of the old school, but you will find him a pioneer and honored leader with the new. None more zealous, in whatever party PREFACE. 11 organization, in furthering the cause of human rights and liberties. In closing this brief and imperfect sketch, let me add sim- ply Jean Paul's Richter's benediction: "May your life glide serenely ; but if storms must convulse, or clouds darken, may there be no more clouds than may glitter in the sunlight, and no storms which the rainbow may not encircle ; and may the Veiled One of heaven watch over your steps, and bring lis to meet where clouds shall cease to darken, and storms to convulse." A. S. NICKERSON. BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH OF SYLVANUS B. PHINNEY. Major Sylvanus Bourne Phinney was born in Barn- stable, Oct. 27, 1808, in the building now occupied by the Sturgis Library. He is a Democrat, his first vote having been cast for Andrew Jackson ; seventeen years president and twenty-five years a director of the Hyannis National and Yarmouth Banks ; for many years secretary of the Barnstable Savings Institution, in the days of its prosperity, and in 1870 chosen president of the Hyannis Savings Bank ; was com- missioned by Gov. Levi Lincoln as major of the First Regi- ment Massachusetts Militia, at the early age of twenty-two years, and served in the regimental reviews at Sandwich and Falmouth in 1832 and 1833; represented the town of Chatham in the Constitutional Convention of 1853 ; was the Democratic candidate for Congress, and councillor of the First District, and represented the First District in the Demo- cratic National Conventions of 1814, 1853, and 1857, and, upon a vacancy existing, received a majority of the votes of the State Senate for councillor. The official returns of votes for councillor in 1882 gave S. B. Phinney 9,922, being the largest Democratic vote ever before cast in the First District. He was appointed collector of the District of Barnstable by President Polk, and held that office under the administra- tions of Presidents Polk, Pierce, Buchanan, and Johnson. During that time he disbursed for the Government hundreds of thousands of dollars to the fishermen of Cape Cod, under the Cod Fishing Bounty Act of 1819 ; was instrumental in procuring from Congress an appropriation of $30,000 for 14 BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH OF SYLVAN US B. PHINNEY. building the Custom House and Post Office at Barnstable ; and raised by subscription a sufficient amount of money for purchasing the grounds and building the Agricultural Hall (Hon. William Sturgis sending him a check for $1,000 to aid him in the work) ; was for some years president of the Barn- stable County Agricultural Society, and represented the society twelve years at the State Board of Agriculture- Daring the war of the Rebellion he was appointed by Gov. John A. Andrew a member of the " Committee of One Hun- dred," and presented the Sandwich Guards, Company D, Third Regiment Massachusetts Battalion, with a costly flag, upon which was inscribed, " Our flag floats to-day not for party, but for country." Hon. William H. Osborne, in his History of the Twenty-ninth Regiment, speaks of his unwavering fidelity to the Union, and his determination to sustain the National Administration in its efforts to crush out treason and rebellion; and that the principal editorial column of his paper was headed by these familiar lines : — " And this be our motto, ' In God is our trust.' And the Star-spangled Banner in triumph shall wave O'er the laud of the free and the home of the brave." On visiting that regiment at Fortress Monroe, in March, 1862, JNIajor Phinney was present at the memorable battle, which occurred on the sabbath, between the ironclads "Moni- tor " and " Merrimac." When the Sandwich company was fully armed and equipped for service, it was joined by Major Phinney ; and he was on the march with Major Chipman, with full ranks, through the streets of Boston, when the company embarked in the steamer for Fortress Monroe. Before the close of the war with Great Britain, in 1814, Major Phinney was a passenger, with his father, on board a packet sloop commanded by Capt. Howes, between Barn- stable and Boston, and taken a prisoner when the packet was fired into by the British frigate "Nymph," in Massa- chusetts Bay, and afterwards boarded and burned with her cargo. He has a cannon-ball fired by a British frigate during BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH OF SYLVANUS B. PTIINNEY. 15 the war, wliicli was lodged upon the Bacon farm, near his own home. Major Phinney received his education in our common schools, and at an early age served an apprenticeship as a printer in the oClice of the Hon. Nathan Hale, of the Boston " Daily Advertiser." He was present at the laying of the corner-stone of the Bunker-hill Monument at the time of the visit of Gen. Lafayette to Boston. The "Barnstable Patriot" was founded by ]Major Phinney, the first number of which was published June 26, 1830. He continued as its editor and proprietor for nearly forty years. In 1832 he married Eliza Cordelia Hildreth, the daughter of Col. Jonathan Hildreth of Concord, Mass., by whom he has living three sons married, and one daughter. After his wife's death in July, 1865, he married in October, 1866, Lucia Green, the youngest daughter of Hon. Isaiah L. Green of Barnstable, who represented the Barnstable Dis- trict in Congress and voted for the war of 1812. Major Phinney is president of the Cape Cod (Unitarian) Conference, a position he has held for nearly twenty years, and has held for long 3^ears the office of vice-president of the New-England Agricultural Society. He was an early pioneer in the culture of the cranberry in Barnstable ; and has a ten-acre lot of pine-trees planted from the seed thirty-five years ago, of large and heavy growth. Major Phinney's apprenticeship with Nathan Hale having expired, he took charge of the " Barnstable Journal," the first number of which was published by N. S. Simpkins, Oct. 10, 1828. He continued in his employ until he established the " Barnstable Patriot " in June, 1830. As foreman in the " Journal " office during that time, he printed from stereo- type plates two large editions of the English Reader. He is a member of Fraternal Lodge of Masons, and of the Boston Commandery Knights Templars.^ He was elected in 1875 a trustee of Humboldt (Iowa) College, and in 1883 appointed by Gov. Benjamin F. Butler to fill a vacancy on the Board of Health, Lunacy, and Charity. Upon retiring from the office of collector of the port in 1801, he received from his 16 BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH OF SYLVAN US B. PHINNET. personal friends a valuable tea-service of silver plate, lined with gold. The presentation was made at the Custom House. The Boston press, in speaking of it, said that " We shall have to ' go ahead ' a good deal faster than ' the law allows ' to get within hailing distance of the Major, who builds all the railroads, improves the harbors, manages the agricultural interests, and, Atlas-like, upholds Cape Cod on his govern- ment-commissioned shoulders." During his long life he has not lost his interest and devotion to the principles of the Democratic party. On the organization of the Cape Cod Central Railroad, he was chosen clerk of the company ; and when the consolida- tion took place between this road and the Old Colony Rail- road Company, in 1872, he presided at a large meeting of the directors and citizens, at Masonic Hall, Hyannis, at the presentation of a service of plate, by the directors and others, to Ephraim N. Winslow, superintendent of the Cape Cod road. The principal guests at the dinner were President Onslow Stearns, Hon. C. F. Choate, William W. Crapo, Col. J. T. Borden, Oliver Ames, S. N. Payson, George Marston, M. L. Lincoln, William Cobb, Amos Otis, Dr. Pineo, C. F. Swift, Dr. D. N. Stone furnishing a graceful poem. Upon the re- tirement of Hon. Nymphas Marston from the office of judge of probate. Major Phinney presided at a presentation of a service of plate to that gentleman. In 1862 he was chosen, at a citizens' meeting of the town of Provincetown, to represent that town upon the subject of the Fishery Treaty at Washington, when a hearing was had by President Grant, the Secretary of State, Hon. Charles Sumner, and the Massachusetts delegation in Congress. The biographical sketches which are furnished in the succeeding pages of this volume show that he has been largely identified with the business industries, as well as that of politics, of this section of the State, for over sixty years, and was, as early as July 9, 1853, notified by the Department of State at Washington, of the difficulties relating to the fisheries; the letter of Gov. Marcy following in another place. BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH OF SILVAN US B. PHINNEY. 17 INTRODUCTORY REMARKS. Before giving in greater detail an account of the ancestry of Major Phinney, together with important historical ref- erences and documents preserved in Old Colony records, which cannot well be left out, so close is the connection of these events with our journalist of so many years, — these he has kindly permitted us to peruse, and publish if thought desirable, — we may call attention to one or two of the more important incidents or events in the treasury of useful in- formation, which every lover of history will be glad to read: such as the " First Landing of the Pilgrims at Province- town," and of the proposed erection of a monument there through his direct efforts and those of the Cape Cod Asso- ciation ; also a letter from John Adams, addressed to Hon. Isaiah L. Green, in December, 1808, which is highly charac- teristic of "the old man eloquent; " and the relic containing the original signature of Gov. Hancock. The book closes with his sketch containing his valedictory address, after a service of forty years with " The Patriot." 18 BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH OF STL VAX US B. PR IN NET. TIMOTHY PHINNEY. TusroTHY Phinxey, the subject of this sketch, was the father of Major Phinney. George Phinney, Esq., a younger son, furnished in the columns of his paper, the Waltham " Free Press," an interesting account of his long life. He says : — '•' On Friday, Sept. 28, 1883, there was a gathering of relatives and friends at the old burying-ground just west of the church on Meeting-house Hill, in Barnstable, Mass., to pay the last offices of respect over the mortal remains of one who, a century ago nearly, was born a short distance from this spot. " He was born in Barnstable, June 13, 1784; was the son of Deacon Timothy and Temperance (Hinckley) Phinney, both of good old Pilgrim stock ; on his father's side being a de- scendant of John Phinney, who came over from England to Plymouth some nine years after 'The Mayflower' touched our shores. His mother was one of the descendants of Thomas Hinckley of Barnstable, for years Governor of Pljanouth Colony, and subsequently elevated to the same office after the annexation of Plymouth to Massachusetts Colony. Dur- ing his long life, extending beyond fourscore years and ten, Deacon Phinney was prominent in civil and church affairs. He held for a time the office of high sheriff of Barnstable County, and was also chosen State senator. His grave and dignified bearing is still among the recollections of some now living, whose memories yet retain the picture of the high pulpit with its sounding-board, the church official seated be- low facing the audience, and the square pews, while the}" still hear in imagination the bang of the hinge-swinging wooden BIOGRAPinCAL SKETCH OF SYLVAN US B. PHINNEY. 19 seats, raised for the convenience of a standing position during prayer. To him was given length of days, and the respect of his townsmen, which he hekl to the close of life. " The birth of his son Timothy took place only about seven months following the evacuation, in November, 1783, by the British, of the last position held on our coast, and several years prior to the adoption of the present Constitution of the United States. It is only necessary to refer to these dates in order to realize the great age of one whose life, commen- cing near the close of the Revolutionary war, was prolonged to the present time, enabling him to note the unexampled stride in population and wealth which a century had brought about. " Early in life Mr. Phinney married Olive Gorham Bourne of Barnstable ; and from this union were born a large family of sons and daughters, four of whom only are now living, viz., S. B. Phinney of Barnstable, the oldest child; Mary Bourne, wife of Josiah Walcott of Roxbury ; George Phinney of Waltham ; and T. Warren Phinney of Bolinas, Cal. A devoted wife and mother, she was likewise a woman of marked character and decided religious principles." 20 BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH OF SYLVAN US B. PHINNEY. AN INTERESTING RELIC. ORIGINAL SIGNATURE OF GOV. HANCOCK, WHILE SELECTMAN OF BOSTON IN 1773. >^o-c