Steamship Chancellor Livingston. 1822 by Richard Varick DeWitt (1800-1868). Image Credit: Albany Institute of History and Art |
Allan Melvill's diary:
Left New York with Mrs. Melvill, five children, Miss Adams & Nurse in the Steam Boat Chancellor Livingston at 4 P M -
August 21 Arrived at Albany at 11 A M --as quoted by Jay Leyda in The Melville Log, 2 vols. (New York: Harcourt, Brace and Company, 1951) volume 1, page 15.Allan Melvill's actual diary is held with Correspondence and miscellaneous manuscripts in the Herman Melville Papers at Houghton Library, Harvard. Citation:
Melville, Allan, 1782-1832.Diary. A.Ms.s.(variously); [v.p.] 1800-1831., 1800-1831. Herman Melville papers, MS Am 188-188.6, MS Am 188, (118). Houghton Library, Harvard College Library. https://id.lib.harvard.edu/ead/c/hou00338c00127/catalog Accessed November 27, 2019
New York National Advocate - August 19, 1823 via GenealogyBank |
- Gansevoort, age 7 (b. December 6, 1815)
- Helen, 6 (b. August 4, 1817)
- Augusta, almost 2 (b. August 24, 1821)
- Herman, 4 (b. August 1, 1819)
- Allan, 4 months (b. April 7, 1823)
(Catherine/Kate was born on May 21, 1825; Frances Priscilla/Fanny on August 26, 1827; and Thomas/Tom on January 24, 1830.)
The summer before (August 7, 1822), Herman and family left New York for Providence on the steamboat Connecticut, then commanded by Captain Elihu S. Bunker (1772-1847).
Tue, Aug 6, 1822 – Page 4 · The Evening Post (New York, New York) · Newspapers.com
After a night at Sanford Horton's Globe Tavern aka Golden Ball Inn on the corner of Benefit and South Court Streets they proceeded on to Boston "in a private Carriage" for a long visit with Herman's grandfather Thomas Melvill and family (Melville Log Vol 1, page 11).
The summer before (August 7, 1822), Herman and family left New York for Providence on the steamboat Connecticut, then commanded by Captain Elihu S. Bunker (1772-1847).
Tue, Aug 6, 1822 – Page 4 · The Evening Post (New York, New York) · Newspapers.com
After a night at Sanford Horton's Globe Tavern aka Golden Ball Inn on the corner of Benefit and South Court Streets they proceeded on to Boston "in a private Carriage" for a long visit with Herman's grandfather Thomas Melvill and family (Melville Log Vol 1, page 11).
Golden Ball Inn, Providence RI via Library of Congress |
Rhode Island American - June 28, 1822, page 2 via GenealogyBank |
Rhode Island American - June 28, 1822, page 3 via GenealogyBank |
CHANCELLOR LIVINGSTON
https://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015018442189?urlappend=%3Bseq=24
Related post:
- Swiftsure line in 1830
https://melvilliana.blogspot.com/2019/11/swiftsure-line-in-1830.html
Wonderful to see you working and working, Scott!
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