The civil, political, professional and ecclesiastical history, and commercial and industrial record of the county of Kings and the city of Brooklyn, N. Y., from 1683 to 1884 Volume I, Part 165

Author: Stiles, Henry Reed, 1832-1909, ed. cn; Brockett, L. P. (Linus Pierpont), 1820-1893; Proctor, L. B. (Lucien Brock), 1830-1900. 1n
Publication date: 1884
Publisher: New York : W. W. Munsell & Co.
Number of Pages: 1114


USA > New York > Kings County > Brooklyn > The civil, political, professional and ecclesiastical history, and commercial and industrial record of the county of Kings and the city of Brooklyn, N. Y., from 1683 to 1884 Volume I > Part 165


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vessels employed in the fisheries, and in shipping their pro- ducts as well as lumber to the West Indies, bartering the outward for return cargoes of salt, sugar, molasses, coffee, and other West India commodities. In 1831, desiring a larger field and greater facilities for his enterprise, he came to New York with a view of establishing himself permanently in the shipping and commission business, judiciously leaving his family behind him until he had gained a secure footing. Owing to the prevalence of Asiatic cholera in the city in 1832 he did not bring his family hither until a year later, at which time he secured a suitable residence in the village of Brook- lyn, Long Island.


James W. Elwell, the subject of this sketch, and son of the foregoing, was put to school in his native place at the tender age of three years, and when nine years old entered the Bath High School or Academy. In these days of exhaustive edu- cation, it may surprise the reader to learn that the charges for tuition at this latter institution, $4 a quarter, were considered quite high; and that, in consequence, the young pupil was duly impressed with the necessity for applying himself dili- gently to his studies. In 1833, when the family removed to New York, James was in his thirteenth year. The sailing vessel that transferred the family and its household effects to Brooklyn was fourteen days in making the voyage thither from Bath. The wonderful changes in Brooklyn since Mr. Elwell became a resident therein may be inferred from the following particulars regarding the place at the time of his arrival. The house into which the family moved was situ- ated between Fulton and Henry streets, in Pierrepont street, which was then the last street opened south of Fulton ferry, and there were very few houses south of it. On the east side of Fulton street, Johnson street was the last street opened. Nearly opposite the Elwells' house were the Pierrepont corn- fields, and where the Court-house now stands a Frenchman named Duflon kept a public house, with which he had con- nected a garden, known as " Military Garden." This house was the first stopping place for travelers leaving the settled part of the village. The site of the present City Hall was a pasture, surrounded by a post and rail fence. In the rear of the Elwells' house in Pierrepont street was Love lane, in which was the residence of Hon. George Hall, president of the village. At this time there were only three watchmen in Brooklyn, and no ferry south of Fulton street had then been established.


In 1833 the elder Elwell formed a partnership with James B. Taylor, under the style of Elwell & Taylor, at 84 Coffee House Slip, New York City; and in the same year his son James entered the house as junior clerk, a part of his duty being to open the office at six o'clock in the morning, a task at which he was punctual and reliable. In the fall of the vear he obtained a situation with James R. Gibson, then a dealer in special produce, including lard, cheese, barley, oat- meal, lime juice and palm oil, at 143 Front street. By the terms of the agreement young Elwell was to receive no sal- ary the first year, and but $50 the second, as was then the custom; but he impressed his worthy employer so favorably that, at the expiration of six months, Mr. Gibson handed him a check for $25, saying, "James, your salary will be $50 the first year. Nor was this all; for when the year expired no account was taken of this payment, nor of presents equal- ing $50 in value, and a check of $50 was paid as the year's salary.


This liberal treatment was continued while he remained in Mr. Gibson's employment; and, while it reflected the highest honor upon the kindness of heart of the employer, it was none the less richly deserved by the boy, who proved worthy of every confidence. The duties of the latter obliged him to


6,57


THE COMMERCE OF BROOKLYN.


rise before daybreak, and after breakfast, by candle-light, to hasten through the village streets, dimly lighted by oil lamps few and far between, to Fulton Ferry, where he crossed the river on the old "double boats" then in use, reaching New York as early risers were giving signs of awakening. At the age of fifteen he was in full charge of his employer's busi- ness, In those days the salaries of clerks were small in com- parison with those now paid, and scarcely half the number of clerks now deemed necessary were employed. Copying presses were not generally in use, and duplicate letters, in- voices, and accounts were consequently copied by hand. The offices and stores were generally kept open evenings, when the letters were written and the business of the day entered and posted in the books. Association, even in a subordinate position, with a man of Mr. Gibson's kindly nature and high regard for principle, could not but leave its legitimate im- pression upon a pure-minded youth, and doubtless this asso- ciation had a great deal to do with the formation of young Elwell's character. In the spring of 1838 Mr. Gibson retired from active business, and soon after James, then a youth of eighteen, was taken into partnership with his father, the style of the firm being John Elwell & Co., and its place of business 57 South street.


Together, John and James W. Elwell, established lines of sailing vessels for the ports of Savannah, Charleston, Mobile, and New Orleans, and, receiving consignments of vessels and merchandise, extended their business of freighting to the West Indies, South America, Europe and the East Indies. The firm of John Elwell & Co. continued until August, 1847, when it was dissolved by the death of the senior partner, Mr. Elwell's father. After carrying on the business in his own name for five years, Mr. Elwell asso- ciated with him his brother, Charles Frederick Elwell, until then a clerk in his employ, and also his bookkeeper, Thomas Brsant, the firm opening in January, 1852, as James W, El- well & Co. In 1854, Mr. Besant retired, and since then the business has been carried on by the two brothers, who still remain in the premises, No. 57 South street, which have been occupied by the Elwells, father and son, for nearly half a century.


In July, 1844, Mir. Elwell married Miss Olivia P. Robinson, daughter of Benjamin Robinson, of Bath, Me., who died February, 1851. Three children were the issue of this mar- riage. In May, 1852, he was again married to Lucy E. K. Stinson, of Bath. Me., daughter of David Stinson. One son, who died in infancy, and two daughters, Lucy S. and Jane Reed, both living, were the issue of this marriage. Mr. El- well's mother died in Brooklyn, September, 1857. His youngest sister, Frances, married the Hon. Henry A. Moore, County Judge of Kings County, New York, an office he is now holding for the fourth terro. Mr. Elwell's career in life has been no less active than exemplary, and he has been honored by his brother merchants with a very large number of responsible positions and trusts in mercantile corporations and associations. He became connected with the old Mer- chants' Exchange, in 1938, and is still an active member of ite successor, the New York Produce Exchange, and one of its Arbitration Committee-a court of equity with the powers of the Supreme Court of the State. On this important com- mittee he has served five consecutive terms. He was elected a member of the Chamber of Commerce in 195, and has served on several of its important committees, among them that on Foreign Commerce and Revenue Laws, of which he has been chairman upwards of ten years. He is one of the oldest, and, it need scarcely be said, most esteemned members of this representative body of merchants. He was one of the original incorporators of the Ship Ourners' Association,


and also of the Marine Bank, and is now the oldest director of the latter. He has likewise been prominent in the or- ganization and direction of a large number of thriving insur- ance companies, savings banks, and leading railroad com- panies, many of the last named being among the principal avenues of commerce in the Western States.


So far from finding himself embarrassed by these numerous and important trusts, Mr. Elwell continues to give them his closest attention, and withal tinds ample time to devote to the interest and advancement of many associations devoted to works of religion and benevolence. For more than twenty years he was a trustee of the American Congregational Union, and is now one of its vice-presidents; and for the same period he has been a trustee of the Seaman's Friend Society. of New York, and of the City Mission and Trust Society, of the City of Brooklyn, and president of the Board of Trustees of the Clinton Avenue Congregational Church. He was a trustee in the New York Port Society for years, and organized the Helping Hand Society, of Brooklyn, of which he has ever since been president. He also founded, with several others, the Home for Friendless Women and. Children, in Brooklyn, In the progress and advancement of the Brooklyn Orphim Asylum he has taken a fatherly interest, and is a member of its Advisory Board of Mana- gers, Of the Fresh Air Fuwl, one of the most worthy charities of the city, which had for its object the taking of poor, delicate, and sickly women and children on short ex- cursions to the country and seaside for the restoration of health and strength, he was, for a long time, president, and has always been a liberal contributor. He is also a life mem- ber and a member of the Boards of Advisors of many of the other leading public charitable and benevolent societies in New York and Brooklyn, including the Mariners' Family Asylum, Staten Island, and an officer in several of them. He is als, a trustee of the Children's Aid Society, and the Brooklyn Dispensary, and on the Advisory Board of Mount Prospect Industrial School Society and Brooklyn Retreat for Insane, Females.


Space does not permit a more complete enumeration of the various charitable works with which he has been actively and responsibly connected ; for a volume would be required to give anything lise a full account of the good work he has inaugurated, organized and furthered. From his purse, which is as open as his heart, more than three hundred churches, inissions, Sabbath-w:hools, asylume, hospitals, di- pensaries and bornes, have, for many years, received sub- stantial aid. In Brooklyn alone, he has contributed to the erection and support of more than fifty churches, mission enterprises, and charitable institutions ; and, from the re- ports of the different organizations a -- isted, and with his private acts of benevolence which are well known, it appears that his charitable benefactions must already exces half a million of dollars.


Mr. Elwell was always an old line Whig, and voted with that party until the Republican party was formed, since which time he has not alled himself with any political fac- tion, but has voted independently, endeavoring to select the best men, in his judgment, to fill the official station for which they were nominated ; and, in local matters especially, he has, at times, refrained from voting for certain candidates, not knowing them personally, and feeling uncertain as to their qualifications. During our lave unfortunate civil war, be rendered marked service to the Umion cause, aiding, by pecuniary assistance and influence, the organizing and equipping of several regiment-, as well as paying the bounty for five substitutes for himself, besides caring for their fammi- lies during their absence. At the great Sanitary Fair, held


658


HISTORY OF KINGS COUNTY.


in the city of Brooklyn, N. Y., during the war, he was prominent in organizing a department of it called the New England Kitchen, which proved a great success financially. He devoted his entire time to it for more than two weeks.


Mr. Elwell was brought up and baptized in the Congrega- tional faith, of which church denomination his parents were members, but when the family removed to Brooklyn, N. Y., there being no church of that denomination there, his parents united with the First Presbyterian church, then located in Cranberry street, and there they remained atten- dants until their decease. In 1854, Mr. Elwell connected himself with the Clinton Avenue Congregational Church Society, the late Rev. W. I. Buddington, D.D., pastor, but did not become a member until January 3, 1864, and at this church he still worships. He has, for nearly thirty years, seated the strangers who attended service, and welcomed all who came to the House of God to worship. During the same period he has been on the pew committee, attending to their rental. One rule has been carried out by the trus- tees of that church, which is, that no member of the church, who was unable to pay his rent, should be obliged to vacate his pew or sitting, but should be permitted to retain it until able to pay. He has seen a large number of men, women and children, who came to worship, gone, he trusts, to worship in the Temple of God, in Heaven.


Three of the characteristics of this philanthropic citizen and upright business man reveal at once the manliness, purity and simplicity of his nature; these are, his respect for the aged, his love for children, and his passion for flowers. Of unpretending manners, yet dignified appear- ance, he impresses one above all with the kindliness and charity of his heart; and even in commercial affairs, he allows the freest and most Christian latitude to his generous impulses, and seems a living refutation of the oft repeated but sordid maxim that there is no friendship in business.


DANIEL AMBROSE, M. D.


This gentleman was born November 14, 1843, in the county of Limerick, Ireland; and, on the paternal side, belongs to a family in which the healing art seems to be hereditary, no less than ten of his family name and kinship being, during the past fifty years, in the medical profession, among whom is his brother, Dr. J. K. Ambrose, Coroner (1883) of Rich- mond county, N. Y. His father, Stephen Ambrose, died when he was about three years of age. Stephen was the son of Jolin Ambrose, who, was a man noted for his upright character. He died some fifteen years ago at a very advanced age. He was the owner in fee of his native place at Dungan- ville. On the maternal side, Dr. Ambrose is descended from a family who were, for centuries, Chieftains of Ormond. They suffered during the various wars and confiscations of the country, and were finally entirely dispossessed of their patrimony by Cromwell, the fanatical zeal of whose fol- lowers caused them to frequently discard the usages of civilized warfare in their treatment of those whom the for- tunes of war placed at their mercy. The tragic fate of the last who held out with the confederated forces against the Cromwellian invaders, is thus told by Morison, a contem- porary historian and eye-witness, whose work "The Thre- nodia," was published at Inspruck in 1659.


" The illustrious Colonel John O'Kennedy, a man of the utmost integrity, was slain by the swords of the enemy after their faith had been pledged to him in battle. His head was then cut off and fastened on a spike in the town of Nenagh, A. D. 1651.


"James O'Kennedy, son of the aforesaid illustrious gentleman, a youth of great hopes, being deluded with


similar pledges of good faith, was executed also at Nenagh, A. D. 1651."


A young son with two other children escaped from the general massacre, settled and prospered in the neighboring county, and from him James O'Kennedy, or Kennedy, as some spelled the name, the maternal grandfather of Dr. Am- brose, was fourth in descent. He died in 1819, and was buried in the cemetery of Anhid with many generations of his kindred; among others his father, and uncle Mark Kennedy. Among the children of the latter was a son of the same name, Lieutenant in the 66th Infantry, who died young, and a daughter who married Mr. John White, of Ennis. Their only child surviving at their death, was a young lady of rare virtues, who, dying at an early age at the commence- ment of this century, left upwards of £30,000 to works of charity and benevolence. In LENIHAN'S History of Limerick are extended particulars of the benevolence of various members of the family, including an account of Miss White's endowment of the College of Park, near the city; and of her conversion of a former theatre into the Church of St. Augustine, which she presented to the Fathers of that Order, and which, located on George street, has since been their house of worship. There is a very handsome monument erected to her memory in the family burying-ground above mentioned. The father of James O'Kennedy married one of the McMahons of Court, who also suffered severely in the Penal days. His grandfather married a member of the Cantillon family, then, and still, large landed proprietors in the county. Another member of this family, a daughter of Robert Cantillon, married Maurice O'Connell, of Derrynane Abbey, whose younger brother was the father of Daniel O'Connell, styled the "Liberator."


Daniel Ambrose, the subject of this sketch received a pre- paratory education at the best classical schools in Ireland, and, in his seventeenth year, took up the study of medicine in the medical schools and hospitals of Dublin. In 1864 he received the diploma of a licentiate of the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland, and in 1865 was made a Doctor in Medi- cine of the Queen's University, and received the diploma of licentiate of the King and Queen's College of Physicians in Ireland. Before the close of the last mentioned year, he came to the United States, and located in Brooklyn, where he has since resided, during the last fifteen years, at his present residence, No. 97 Second Place. His success in liis profession was rapid, and he soon obtained a large and lucra- tive practice. In 1866, he joined the Kings County Medical Society, of which he is still a member. He was connected with St. Mary's Hospital, Brooklyn, at its inception, and in 1875 was appointed by the Commissioners of Charities of Kings county, physician to their Department. The Brooklyn Press, of June 29, 1873, speaking of him, says:


" Dr. Ambrose is building up a splendid practice in Brook- lyn. His thorough European education and experience, emphatic though brief, because the Doctor is still a young man, has its proper weight, and it is safe to affirm that no physician in this city has finer prospects, and none has de- served them more."


In 1867, Dr. Ambrose married Miss Anna Parker, only child of James Parker, at whose death, which occurred when she was but one year old, she became the ward of the Lord Chancellor of Ireland, and so continued until she attained her majority ; her mother being a daughter of John O'Connell, of a very old and respectable family. James Parker was the son of Richard, whose father in the olden times was a very prosperous merchant and owner of vessels plying on the river Shannon. The mother of James Parker was Anna, daughter of Thomas Jacques, who was descended from a Huguenot family, which emigrated from France in the seventeenth century, and settled in Ireland. Thomas


Daniel Abuse.


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THE COMMERCE OF BROOKLYN.


saw extensive service in the British navy, and fought with Nelson in all the naval battles of the Mediterranean and the Nile, and was engaged in the famous naval fight at Trafalgar in 1805, in which the great admiral lost his life. He was the son of Luke, the son of Isaac Jacques, who was mayor of the city of Limerick over one hundred years ago, and whose monument still exists in St. John's Protestant Church in that city, of which church he and his family were members.


While at the zenith of success, in 1879, Dr. Ambrose was obliged to suspend the active practice of his profession on account of his suffering from catarrh, with which so many persons are afflicted along the Atlantic seaboard, and especi- ally physicians, owing to their frequent exposure in all kinds of weather. Being of an active temperament, he could not remain idle, and he associated himself with his cousin, Mr. John W. Ambrose, of New York, whose firm of Mills & Ambrose had just then completed the contract for the con- struction of the Second Avenue Elevated Railroad in the city of New York.


John W. Ambrose is a gentleman of rare energy, abil- ity and executive qualities, and his indomitable persever- ance, together with the magnitude of his works, have placed him in the foremost ranks of the contractors of this country, his operations having necessitated the employment of 6,000 men at one time. Together they purchased, in December, 1879, the large tract of water front between Twenty-sixth and Twenty-eighth streets, Brooklyn, and from the vicinity of Third avenue to the channel line of Gowanus bay, con- taining about twenty-seven acres. They immediately com- menced operations, in which they were joined about six months subsequently by Mr. Robert J. Mills, of New York city. The general plan or scheme of these gentlemen em- braced the establishment of dry docks, piers, a series of warehouses, and, indeed, such other improvements as the enterprise would from time to time develop. They built large and powerful steam dredges and scows of the largest capacity, for the purpose of dredging, so as to make deep water, and carrying the excavated material to sea, for which object they had steam tugs of great towing capacity. April 23d, 1882, the Brooklyn Eagle devoted much space to a re- view of this enterprise, saying, among other things:


" In short, it was the practical rescue by capital of what had hitherto been only a vast expanse of water and swamp, and its subordination to the spirit of progress. Since that time one-half of the property, including that part between Twenty-sixth and Twenty-seventh streets, or a little over two hundred lots, by making deep water, sinking cribs and building land behind them, has been improved. There is sufficient water to allow vessels to come in and out, and the cribs have been sunk to a distance or depth sufficient to float the largest vessels that come to this port, thus anticipating by a year or two the dredging of the channel by the United States Government. *


* * * Continuing the march of improvement the company built from the bulk- head line to the external or pier line, a distance of about 700 feet, two pile piers, between which were placed two in- mense sectional dry docks. These docks are capable of lifting the heaviest ships, and have all the appliances known to modern ship-building. Since their construction they have been in constant use. The advantages accruing from the situation of the docks are : their central location, abundant space, immunity from the depredations of river thieves, freedom from the commercial annoyances of low tides, and their constant employment of large numbers of men who have came from New York and other cities to reside per- manently in Brooklyn, and thus contribute to the bone and the sinew of its working community. From trustworthy sources it is estimated that, owing to the influx of popula- tion by reason of this great commercial improvement of the city, over half a million dollars is distributed annually, while small houses in the vicinity of the ship yards are in the greatest demand by the families of mechanics who have


come to stay, and who constitute a little settlement of their own. One of the many interesting features in connection with the improvement of this property is the eight great tab- ular wells, located at a depth of about 60 feet, and which furnish a supply of fresh, delicious water, limited only by the capacity of the pipes sunk. From this source 20,000 gallons of water per hour are obtained, and the supply can be increased almost indefinitely. It is distributed in six- inch pipes over a great part of the property, and through these are numerous taps and nozzles, ready at any time to be brought into requisition, either for general use or in case of fire or other emergencies."


The water has been analyzed and found to be free from any substances deleterious either for drinking purposes or boiler use, and it is worthy of note in this connection, that the system so successfully introduced by Dr. Ambrose and his associates was, not long afterward, adopted by the city of Brooklyn in furnishing a water supply to its rapidly aug- menting population. The writer in the Eagle continues :


"On the piers and slips running away out into the water and inviting, as it were, the merchantmen of distant shores to come into a safe and convenient harbor, is a little village of store-houses, blacksmith shops, offices and other buildings. Probably the most attractive of these is the ele- gant office occupied as the business headquarters on the dock, which is built on pile foundations in order to make it as sub- stantial in construction as possible. In imitation of corru- gated iron, and both finished and furnished in hard woods, it marks a happy combination of commerce and art. From the balcony of the second story a bird's-eye view of the ac- tive, busy scene below and the superb water front is pre- sented, while a perfect forest of masts rises up toward the sky, emblematical in its upward tendency of Brooklyn's commercial future. Along the 4,000 feet of river front may be seen the winter quarters of numerous yachts, excursion boats and steamers. Only a short distance further off are a number of vessels used in the North river freight trade, one of the Old Dominion line of steamers, and several vessels which have either been on the dry docks, or awaiting their turn for repairing to be done. Over toward the extreme river front the Iron Steamboat Company has leased for five years about 700 feet of the dock, which is to be occupied as a depot for its boats in winter, as a storage place at nights in summer, owing to the inadequacy of accommodations in New York for that purpose, as a coaling bunk, and to take in water for the boilers from the capacious water works already described. The superintendent of the company * *




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