watkinson_david
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David Watkinson was born in England in 1778 and came to New England with his parents and 11 siblings in 1795, at the age of 17. Having first settled in New York in the mercantile business, Watkinson moved to [[hartford|Hartford]] in 1799 after having recovered from a bout of yellow fever. He established a general wholesale business, selling hardware, iron, and steel, and by 1801, had built a brick and mortar building at 350 Front Street. In 1803, David Watkinson married Olivia Hudson, daughter of the partner of the publishing firm Hudson and Goodwin, proprietors of the //Hartford Courant// | David Watkinson was born in England in 1778 and came to New England with his parents and 11 siblings in 1795, at the age of 17. Having first settled in New York in the mercantile business, Watkinson moved to [[hartford|Hartford]] in 1799 after having recovered from a bout of yellow fever. He established a general wholesale business, selling hardware, iron, and steel, and by 1801, had built a brick and mortar building at 350 Front Street. In 1803, David Watkinson married Olivia Hudson, daughter of the partner of the publishing firm Hudson and Goodwin, proprietors of the //Hartford Courant// | ||
- | By 1819, Watkinson had taken a partner and the firm became Watkinson & Co., where he worked until his retirement in 1841. David Watkinson was also active in other business activities in the Hartford area from the beginning of his time there, into his retirement years, and even until his death in 1857. He took a keen interest in helping new businesses or improving old ones, especially with regard to travel and river navigation. He served as director of the Hartford Bank, Hartford Fire Insurance Company, and the Connecticut River Banking Company, as well as having served | + | By 1819, Watkinson had taken a partner and the firm became Watkinson & Co., where he worked until his retirement in 1841. David Watkinson was also active in other business activities in the Hartford area from the beginning of his time there, into his retirement years, and even until his death in 1857. He took a keen interest in helping new businesses or improving old ones, especially with regard to travel and river navigation. He became the director of the Hartford Bank, the Hartford Fire Insurance Company, and the Connecticut River Banking Company, as well as serving |
- | David Watkinson frequently updated his will with codicils, 16 in all, that " | + | David Watkinson frequently updated his will with codicils—sixteen |
- | As David Watkinson was also an incorporator and charter [[trustees|trustee]] of [[washington_college|Washington College]] (now Trinity), the Watkinson Library has been a presence in the lives of the students and faculty of Trinity College from the beginning. At the opening of its doors to patrons in August 1866, the Watkinson Library was pronounced as “the pride and honor and ornament of our city” of Hartford. ((Clarke, p. 25)) Between 1949 and 1951, Trinity College offered to permanently house the Watkinson Library on its campus in a new library building to be constructed, | + | David Watkinson was also an incorporator and charter [[trustees|trustee]] of [[washington_college|Washington College]] (now Trinity); the Watkinson Library has been a presence in the lives of the students and faculty of Trinity College from the beginning. At the opening of its doors to patrons in August 1866, the Watkinson Library was pronounced as “the pride and honor and ornament of our city” of Hartford. ((Clarke, p. 25)) Between 1949 and 1951, Trinity College offered to permanently house the Watkinson Library on its campus in a new library building to be constructed, |
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watkinson_david.1683515290.txt.gz · Last modified: 2023/05/08 03:08 by estoykovich