The Philadelphia Directory, 1804, Part 1

Author:
Publication date: 1785
Publisher: Philadelphia
Number of Pages: 292


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PHILADELPHIA


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1804


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THE


ILADELPHIA DIRECTORY


FOR


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1804


CONTAINING


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THE NAMES, TRADES AND RESIDENCE


hi


by


OF THE


COHABITANTS OF THE CITY, SOUTHWARK, NORTHERN e 2 LIBERTIES, AND KENSINGTON.


,


1 2


,


TO WHICH IS PREFIXED


a brief sketch of the origin and present state of the City of


i'nt


'of ' bu


PHILADELPHIA.


del huc- fort BY JA' : ROBINSON. .u lu unit v .... or Revela- . methinks of auspicious omen: " Be- Jold," says the inspired Apostle, to the Angel of the


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BRIEF SKETCH


· a trea- in the


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OF THE ORIGIN AND PRESENT STATE OF heo-


THE CITY OF


PHILADELPHIA.


HILADELPHIA is the capital of Pennsylvania, and the chief city of the United States, in point of size d splendour; though it now fills but the second rank in spect to commercial importance : the trade of America ving latterly flowed more freely into the open channels the bay of New-York. It must also yield metropolitan cedence to the doubtful policy of a seat of government, removed from the chief resort of wealth and population, pendulum of national activity, which must long vibrate rhaps for ever) between Baltimore, Philadelphia, and w-York ; a chain of commercial cities, unparalleled in tory, whose vigorous impulse is already accelerated the bold ramification of turnpikes and canals.


1 .- Philadelphia is situated about 40 degrees north of the eq; Wiator, and 75 west of London ; being in the same paral- e. of latitude with Spain, Italy, and Greece ; climates, Dose happy temperature had already indicated for Pei Cnnsylvania a milder winter, before the original frosts of 31 November and December, by which the first adven- tu'[gers were sometimes frozen up in the Delaware, had dently yielded to the qualifying effects of exposing I's surface of the earth to the rays of the sun.


raid Its founder, the benevolent and pacific William Penn, Vellinominated it PHILADELPHIA, or the city of BROTHERLY inter'E, from a town in ancient Greece, so named in honour Sf / Afthe fraternal attachment of Attalus and Eumenes; and bu Merward famous in the Christian World, for one of the des aven Churches to which St. John addressed his prophe- hu(- visions, so sublimely delivered in the book of Revela- fort Sills .----- A name methinks of auspicious omen: " Be- Hold," says the inspired Apostle, to the Angel of the


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in Philadelphia, " I have set before thee an ope and no man can shut it." Religious liberty is he: cered right, the policy, as well as the equity, n, to say nothing of its consistency with the spir chat religion which breathes freace on earth, and go. will to men, is happily confirmed in these latter ages . the church, by the harmony and fellowship in which th various Professors of the modern Philadelphia, so pec liarly fraternize.


PENN had been concerned in the settlement of Ne Jersey, some years before he obtained from Charles a grant of the territory on the western side of the D laware. The Dutch and Swedes were then numero at Upland (now Chester) at New-Castle, and at t Hærkills (now Lewis-Town) and a number of his br thern in religious profession, had already establish themselves at Shackamaxon (now Kensington, a subu of Philadelphia) in the year 1678; when a ship, cal the Shield, of Stockton, the first that had ever ventur to sail so high up the river, in tacking about, ran l bowsprit among the trees which lined the sh where the city now stands; and the New Comers board, bound for Burlington, then remarked to ez other, that it would be a fine place for a town.


The royal grant passed the great seal on the 4th March, 1681; and in August the following year, venerable Legislator of Pennsylvania set sail from L don, in the ship Welcome, Captain Greenway.


The Proprietor was accompanied by a hundred of friends and fellow professors, contemptuously cal Quakers, by their haughty countrymen ; because, their religious meetings, like the Faithful of every a they sometimes trembled at the word of God. F


A prosperous gale wafted the Patriarchs of Penns vania, in six weeks, to the friendly coast of Ameri and the Proprietary landed at New-Castle, on the 2 of October, under the acclamations of the Dutch S tlers, who accompanied him to Upland, the princi Swedish settlement, where he collected an assembly all the Freemen of the Province, by whom his jurisdict was unanimously recognised and confirmed.


(


5 )


) It was here that the Father of his country made a trea- with the harmless Natives, which was to last, in the E ofurative style of those nervous Aborigines, who have "Blice been so grossly misrepresented by European Theo- Ofits, as long as the trees should grow, or the waters run .--- OD treaty that was faithfully observed by both parties t the Potentates of Europe blush) through a happy riod of eighty successive years; and that has since en consigned to historic immortality by the patriotic hcil of a Descendant of one of the peaceful Assistants, Av the first painter of the age.


The founder of Pennsylvania was not long in fixing an (' on a situation that seemed prepared by nature, perhaps real . Providence, for the sudden growth of his future capital. ha the spot was then covered with timber, its foundation of sal's a stratum of potter's clay, the harbour furnished a ¿hq of sand, the nearest hills contained quarries of stone, vicinity yielded limestone and marble, and the pene- 'cion of intelligent Observers, discovered mines of coal ¿ iron, upon the navigable branches of the Delaware, g before the new settlement afforded hands to work m.


it is an extensive plain, five miles above the conflu- nc e of two navigable rivers, the Delaware and the eqi e. 0. uylkill; the former, though 120 miles from the sea, ng there a mile in width, and deep enough for vessels 1200 tons ; the latter, half as wide as the Thames at PeitIndon, being also navigable as high as the scite of the of 3


tuing Some families of Swedes and Fins had obtained by II tlement, the right of possession. They willingly sold, 1623 tric 'vellmn exchanged, their claim ; and by the end of the year 32, the ground plot of the future city was regularly l out. Nine streets two miles in length, run east and. Ist, from river to river, and twenty-three, of a mile, of Anersect them at right angles, from north to south. None bu An den these are less than fifty feet wide, and they distri- e the plan into squares, the interior of which was hulAnigned for yards and gardens. Two main streets of a fort 1in dred feet wide, cross each other in the centre, and n an open Place or Public square, of which four more


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were laid out in the different quarters of the city ; and : range of houses for the principal Inhabitants was intended to open upon the water, in the manner of the celebrate Bomb Quai at Rotterdam; for which purpose the ware houses, &c. along the river, were intended to have been kept from rising above the bank. But cupidity (per haps convenience) has crouded the platforms between the streets with narrow alleys; the Public Squares, ex cept only that in the centre, have been otherwise appr. priated, and the bank of the river has been built up wit a row of houses that now intercepts from the City tl intended view of the Port.


. Four score houses and cottages were erected with the year, one of which is now occupied as a Taver the sign of the Boatswain and Call, at the corner of From and Dock streets; and another that was the City rer dence of William Penn, is yet standing in Black-hor alley directly back of Lætitia court, which was so nam from one of the daughters of the Proprietary. Opposite the latter, in the middle of Market-street, there stood f many years a monument of primitive simplicity, a wood- Jail, that was seldom inhabited by any body but t. jailor.


The first child born in the new city, by name Jo! Key, lived to his 85th year; one Edward Drinke who was born in a cave under the bank of Delawar survived 'till the declaration of Independence, when ti · capital of the United States was estimated to conta 6,000 houses, and 40,000 People ; and there is a widc Lady yet living, whose mother arrived from England wh there were but three houses in Philadelphia


The State House of Town Hall, a substantial edifi of 200 feet front, including the wings, was erected wit in half a century after the woods were cleared away fro its scite ; the first Episcopal church was soon afterwar ornamented with a steeple that may vie in point of el gance, with any spire in Europe; and, while Pennsy vania was still a dependant colony, scarcely distinguish on the other side of the Atlantic among twelve adjace provinces of the British empire in America, a new Pris was erected, sufficiently capacious for the future int duction of the philanthropic reform that has since co


(7 )


Derted our jails into manufactories, and our criminals „to manufacturers.


During the revolutionary war, the capital of the strug- Jug colonies remained stationary, or rather retrograded, Under the occupation of the royal Army, by whom how- .er, the houses were first numbered, and a floating bridge as thrown across the Schuylkill.


The western improvements then scarcely extended If a mile from the Delaware, and it was a country Ik for the citizens to go to the Hospital, the Swedes arch, or the ship-yards at Kensington.


an ( real ha, of s Since the Revolution, so happily terminated by the flependence of the United States, under the disin- jested co-operation of a Franklin, in counsel, a Morris, hyfinance, and a Washington in the field, Philadelphia pre d trà increased with astonishing rapidity, notwithstanding repeated ravages of a mortal fever, introduced from pestilential atmosphere of the western Archipelago, erano Mere it has been excited to unusual virulence by the relon påall wars of St. Domingo. In the year 1793 it swept kay 5,000 people.


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J FA superb edifice of the Corinthian order, with a majes- ncmportico of six fluted columns of white marble, was then Welding for the reception of the Bank of the United Fiantes, a vigorous offspring of the Federal Constitution, o. it had been framed in 1788, and organised in the fol- Pel of 3 Ting year, by the patriotic Washington, on being vo- tarily ratified by two thirds of the Thirteen Indepen- t States that then formed the American Union --- Thus gibiting to the expecting world, a first example of a l'at Nation reforming a defective system of govern- mht, without unsheathing the sword.


The City has since been beautified with an elegant cture, executed in white marble, from the design n Ionick Temple, for the offices of the Bank of Penn- ania; and the intersection of the two principal ets is now occupied by a marble Rotunda, for the re- fion and distribution of the Schuylkill water, raised by hinery to a level of thirty or forty feet above the est ground in the City.


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The streets of Philadelphia are paved with pebble stones, and bordered with ample footways of brick, raised one foot above the carriage way, for the ease and safety of passengers. They are kept cleaner than those of any city in Europe, excepting the towns of Holland, where trade is carried on by canals ; and London is the only capital in the world that is better lighted at night.


The private buildings are generally three stories hig! They are built of a clear red brick, and generally orna mented in the new streets, with facings, key stone and flights of steps, in white marble.


Ever since the operation of the Federal Constitution, fo or five hundred houses have been annually erected, nosma proportion of which (it is said, not less than two hundre have been built, or caused to be built, by a single Citize whose well laid plans have greatly improved the Cit particularly in Walnut street ; in Sansom street, t first that has been built in America with a strict atte tion to uniformity ; and in Second street, where it cross a morass that had long formed an inconvenient sej ration between the City and the northern Suburbs.


Philadelphia, including Southwark and the Northe Liberties, now extends near three miles along the De ware, and about a mile east and west; and is suppos to contain thirteen thousand houses, and eighty thousa People.


There are in it upwards of thirty churches, or meeti houses ; in which the various Denominations of Believe perform the homage of public worship, to the comm Father of Mankind, according to their peculiar forms a persuasions, under the happy system of toleration, secur to all professions, without a legal establishment for ar


Three large Meeting houses are now building in c ferent parts of the City, and stone piers have been erec in the river Schuylkill, for a permanent bridge of thi arches, whose gigantic span would have been thous impracticable in Europe, long after the first settlem of Pennsylvania.


The market of Philadelphia, for beef, veal, and mutt is second only to that of Leadenhall ; and its pork, pou? and game, are not inferior to those of the finest clima


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"the world : though it is excelled by New-York in e vr'l articles of fish and fruit.


The City was first incorporated in 1701, before which i'yriod it was called the town of Philadelphia ; but the Corporation was self elective, and not accountable to the 'Pizens. according to the arbitrary systems of the mo- r country.


On the late auspicious revolution, this Charter was pulled, and its powers were variously distributed, un- in 1789, a Corporation was again regularly organised, charter, constituting a Mayor, Recorder, fifteen Al- men, a Common Council, &c. &c. &c. The latter to annually chosen by the taxable Inhabitants.


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The public Institutions of Philadelphia, are peculiarly


herous and beneficial. They include a University, vell as a competent number of public, private, and Schools, a Philosophical Society, a Museum, a pub- Library, a Hospital, a Dispensary, one public and private Alms-houses, a College of Physicians, soci- for promoting Agriculture, for the encouragement Arts and Manufactures, for the Abolition of Negra ery (a stain of Colonial dependance that still tarnishes fair escutcheon of American freedom) and for ale- ing the miseries of Public prisons, to whose benevo- exertions -is chiefly owing the improvement of the ul code, and the present safety of the inhabitants from depredations of the unprincipled part of the commu- 11


eside these benevolent associations, there are now in tun?Iladelphia, three chartered Banks, six marine Insurance I mpanies, two for insuring against fire, and forty-one niting offices, five of which, publish daily papers, that tair n in a few days circulated, gratis, from Georgia to New- Veltmanpshire, by means of the Post-office, which originated 775, in the then capital of the British Colonies, under bf/ Anauspices of the venerable Franklin, so long the bene- bu Anor of his country.


cleanThe Mint of the United States is still kept at Phila- huAnhia; a Type Foundery has been long established, for' \in printing, coachmaking, cabinet work, and shipbuild- intare carried to a degree of perfection unrivalled in


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America, and litle excelled in Europe. But the stap commodity of Philadelphia is flour, of which 400,00 barrels have been exported in a year.


Such is the salubrity of the air of Philadelphia thi the births annually exceed the deaths in the proportion five to three; yet the excessive heat of the summ months, during which the thermometer may be averag at 72, and sometimes rises to 93, is so nearly allied the atmosphere of the burning zone, as readily to rece and propagate the Yellow Fever of the West Indies, late so frequently introduced into the United Stai through perpetual intercourse, feebly restrained by inadequate operations of local and temporary health la


Within the memory of a Gentleman of observat there were but three coaches kept among the Gentry Philadelphia ; not more than two, or at most three sì arrived once a year with the un-rivalled manufacture Great Britain ; nor were petty sloops fitted out to change American flour for West India produce bu shares of one third, one sixth, or even one twelfth. the then principal Merchants of the place. Without ceeding the bounds of ordinary longevity he has live see twelve or fifteen hundred Sail annually expedited every quarter of the Globe, of which fifteen or twe double the southern Promontory of Africa, and exp the Antipodes for the most costly productions of East ; while at home three hundred coaches occasion display the ease of opulence, or the elegance of luxu


Such an encrease of wealth and splendor, withir recollection of a single · Man, admits of but one com son in the history of the World ; and, if Petersburg 1 justly boast superior numbers, and a more recent ori it has been created among the marshes of the Neva I succession of absolute princes, commanding the resou of a mighty empire ; while Philadelphia at first only chief town of a dependant colony, and now no more the capital of a single Province of an infant Nation, risen upon the banks of the Delaware, from the lit institutes of a PRIVATE Founder, seconded only by energy of principle, and the efforts of intelligence, distinguished rank among the Capitals of Nations.


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ACCOUNT OF BUILDINGS


ERECTED IN PHILADELPHIA IN 1802 AND 1803 ;


BY ACTUAL- ENUMERATION.


P '! st & West


ex ]


Jowhill st.


1 4


8


6


Water st.


4


0


3 0


street


2


0


3


1


Front st.


3


0


4


0


Safras st.


6


0


4


0


Second st.


7


0


8


0


Jidberry st.


3


0


7


1


Third st.


4


0


1


0


Serry st.


4


0


5


0


Fourth st.


8


0


10


0


albert st.


3


1


3


0


Fifth st.


16


0


4


0


an rex


harch alley th st.


4


0


0


0


Sixth st.


11


0


12


0


Seventh st.


10


0


14


1


ha! snut st.


27


5


11


0


Eighth st.


6


0


10


0


IlGom st.


12


0


22


0


Ninth st.


13


0


8


0


'heis alley


6


0


0


0


Tenth st.


6


9


2


1


pre unut st.


13


0


9


0


Eleventh st.


4


1


2


2


dfra sne st.


0


0


3


0


Twelfth st.


3


1


10


0


eranc, Last st.


6


2


9


6


Bank st.


5


0


0


0


ce st.


19


2


9


0


Branners alley


6


0


0


0


onthe


st.


14


3


10


1


106 11


88


4


1.3 bard st.


5


9


6


3


144 29


121 20


:ndakill st.


6


0


4


0


Jar st.


) 0


4


0



eqi


144 29 121 20


250 40


209 24


e.


, west of Twelfth street


6 15


15 20


thern Liberties, to the first mile stone


59 53


44 35


Peinnwark, including all the built part


23 18


15 23


of 3it tur/ 12 -


Brick,


338


283


Frame,


126


102


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Total,


464


385


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p that there were in 1802 --- Four Hundred and Sixty-four, and :03 --- Three Hundred and Eighty-five houses erected in the and Liberties.


bu


hud fort !


1802


1803


Nor. & Sout.


1803


Streets.


Br. Fr. Br. Fr.


streets.


1802 Br. Fr.


Br. Fr.


8


3


2


2


of


reton pun st.


5


0


2


0


-


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REMOVALS, &c.


ARMROYD GEO. merchant, 134 Mulberry, 95 Water street


Armstrong Thos. attorney at law, near 100 S Fourth. Ashbridge Joseph, biscuit baker, 21 Church alley


Barclay & Hart, grocers, 226 N Third street


Burrows Jesse, carpenter, 278 High street


Brooks Robert, surveyor, opposite 311 N Third


Campbell & Watt, grocers, 20 George street Cook John, china store 311 N Second


Cluley John, wire worker, 34 S Third street


Davy Wm. & Son, merchants, 112 Spruce street De La Croix Lewis, confectioner, 61 S Second str Dunkin Robert H. attorney at law, 206 S Front str Haskins Thomas, merchant, 126 Spruce street


M'Cauley John, coppersmith, 119 S Front street M'Corkle Wm. publisher of the Evening Post, 21 W M'Cutcheon Ebenezer, merchant, next 48 N Third M'Eacharn & Primrose, sadlers, 87 S Second stree MaoKie Peter & Co. soap and candle manufactur corner of Tenth and Philbert


Miller & Van Beuren, merchants, 109 S Front stre Nice James, boot and shoemaker, 47 S Third stre Robb James, letter carrier, 4 Elbow lane


Slesman John, grocer, 65 S Water street Smallwood Charles, taylor and grocer, 112 Cedar


THE


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PHILADELPHIA DIRECTORY,


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FOR 1804.


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pres ARON, widow Boarding-House 11 Norris's Alley edtra ott Eve, widow 185 Sassafras eran&tt. George, hair-dresser 9 Chesnut relon gott George, druggist and apothecary 85 High


onthe htt Henry, blacksmith 4 Chancery Lane ich ],4tt David, taylor Frankford Road ndott John, labourer 13 Gillis alley Brott & Barnes, curriers 20 South Third street


eqi lott Timothy, currier 57 Dock street le .: wptt Henry William, carver & gilder 30 Elizabeth wi " George, shoemaker 205 North Front Pelf Peter, shoemaker 435 N Second of 31 Daniel, carter 138 Lombard turf John, carpenter 10 Brown 11 John, grave digger Cypress alley 16/ Peter, shoemaker near 17 Apppletree alley aid crombie Rev. J. 101 Pine vellycrombie Thomas B. printer 19 Chesnut


'nt :/gton Susannah, gentlewoman 93 N Sixth f/ Tham, widow of Benedict, 126 Brown bu: ham Thomas, teacher 103 Cedar de ares James, mariner 17 Queen huAres Y. carpenter, 24 Catharine fort ley Abraham, cedar cooper 110 Vine Rey D. shopkeeper 33 N Front & 6 Carter's alley


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Ackley J. B. chair maker 150 N Front Adams John, biscuit-baker 293 St. John's Adams John, printer corner Walnut & 11th Adams Daniel, sea-captain near 207 N Water Adams Peter, hair-dresser 64 Shippen Adams John, attorney at law 87 S Fifth Adams J. & R. merchants 129 Walnut Adams Thomas, boarding-house 113 S Water Adams Robert, porter 180 Shippen Adams Robert, carpenter, 15 Fine Adams Mary, washer, 146 N Eighth Adams Moses, sshipwright 53 Queen Adams St. Lawrence, shoemaker 77 S Front Adams Martha, widow, 259 S Fourth Adams William, carpenter 110 Walnut Adam Francis, hatter 89 N Front Adcock William, gentleman, 30 N Eighth Addington Stephen, teacher of Young ladies, 96 Un Addis J. carpenter & wheel-wright Germantown road Adgate Daniel, accomptant 89 New Adler Christian, cabinet maker 300 Vine Adolph John, carpenter 363 N Third


Ager George, rope-maker, Frankford road


Agnew Giles, widow 302 S Front Agnew Margaret, grocer 342 N Front


Aiel George, sail-maker 154 S Eighth


Aiel & Fenton, sail makers Vine street wharf


Aikin B. grocer 110 Cedar


Aitken Jane, successor to Robt. sen. printer & static 20 N Third


- Aitken Robert, jun. printer Pearson's court Aitkens John, silversmith 33 S second


Akerman Samuel, printer Richardson's court Akin James, engraver 143 Walnut


Alberger J. victualler Lawrence st. & 14 3d st. sham Alberger P. victualler Lawrence st. & 16 3d st shan Alberger Adam, victualler 186 Cherry Alberger Henry, victualler. 46 Okl shambles Alberger John, victualler 165 N Second Alberson R. lumber merchant 101 Swanson Albert Joseph, saw-sharper 157 Lombard Albert Casper, tavern keeper corner of 3d and Bro Albert Henry, plain maker 148 Lombard


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„dertus Lewis, inn-keeper corner Dock and Water nydright John, mariner 6 Callowhill Oudright Frederick, cedar cooper 81 Brown "15 right Charles, musical instrument maker 25 Vine : )right Michael, cedar cooper 36 N. Sixth iPright John, carpenter James st


-


sis right Elizabeth, widow 29 Callowhill right Conrad, shoemaker 22 High street


- e de Charles, hair dresser 73 N. Front arn George, leather cutter 167 S. Third brn Michael, sea captain 55 Spruce bck-William, stamp cutter 21 Coates street Lander Archibald, mariner 38 German


an.( kander Catherine, widow M'Cullough's court


rer xander John, printer Cauffman's court . ha, sander John, P. grocer 482 Sassafras of s @ scander John, cabinet maker corner of Locust & 11th press sander Elizabeth, Beech near Maiden street dfrais kander Elizabeth, tayloress Shepherd's court eranc, sander James, A. merchant 37 N. Second relon waylander James, shoemaker 147 Walnut


onthe': ander Richard, carpenter & cabinet maker 85 Penn


ander Robert, grocer 27 Green


. ich 1 ander Rachael, widow 24 Plumb kander Margaret, mantua maker 191 Lombard


eq; ykander Mrs. grocer 284 S Second le kander William, laborer 132 S Ninth wi wydice Peter, silk .dyer 181 S Second


Pei merger S & E. mantua makers 112 N Fourth of Bilfin George, bookseller 100 Sassafras tullia ram George, ship wright 170 Swanson John, mariner 118 N Water


e,or Mary, boarding house 215 N Second Thi Chamless, merchant 23 Lombard


Charles, druggist &c. 160 S Second


ve! n Charles, 245 S Second 'ntien David, shoemaker 34 Christian of An Margaret, 117 N Sixth buien Enoch, taylor 54 S Water


det An Edward, hatter Tenth near Arch


huch John, E. gentleman 59 S Seventh for yi Joseph, mariner 27 Christian


th John, merchant 120 Spruce


( 16 )


Allen Joseph, sen. inspector 88 Union Allen Joseph, jun. carpenter 60 Spruce Allen James, shopkeeper 294 S Third Allen Samuel, mariner 360 S Second Allen John, W. printer 69 S Fifth Allen John, oak cooper black horse alley Allen Lewis, boarding house 30 Cedar Allen Robert, innkeeper 317 S Third Allen Richard, Rev. 150 Spruce Allen Mary, widow 124 S Sixth Allen Samuel, merchant 29 Mulberry Allen Thomas, livery stable keeper 46 N 6th Allen Thomas, labourer Locust above 9th Allen Thomas, sweep 26 Dock Allen & Watson, merchants 69 S Water Allen William, health officer 21 Keys alley Allen William, painter, glazier & innkeeper 6 Dock Allibone Thos. and Son, corner Sassafras & Water Allibone Thomas, merchant 53 N Fourth




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