William James Patriarch of a Great Irish-American Family
The James family
were probably the most intellectual American family
of the nineteenth century, starting with the arrival
of William James from Cavan Ireland in 1789 until death
of his grandson Henry James the novelist in 1916. The
man who would be known as William James of Albany was
born on a 25 acre tenant farm in Bailieborough Co Cavan
Ireland in 1771. The James family produced oats, potatoes,
and flax for the making of Irish linen. William James
made the most of the slim educational possibilities
available to him in Ireland at that time, William James
prided himself on his elegant script, and was mildly
interested in reading literature. William had an educational
push for intellectual betterment.
The rebellion of the American colonies
against England in the 1770's sent a tremble of excitement
through the tenant farmers of Ireland. Astute Irishmen
with ideas of political independence from England were
to hasten matters after the decisive defeat of the English
at Saratoga in 1777. The English however felt it strategically
wise to prevent rebellion locally in Ireland by easing
restrictions. The repressive laws in Ireland at that
time were eased, rules were modified for the recruiting
of Irish of all religions into the English army for
the American war.
For young William James conditions
in Co Cavan Ireland remained uncertain at best. Seeing
no satisfactory future in Ireland, and inspired by the
outcome in America. William James packed his few books
and clothes, and pocketed his small amount of money
and left Ireland for America. The first place
William James visited was Saratoga
where General John Burgoyne surrendered to the colonists.
That visit lead to William James settling in the nearby
village of Albany. By the time of his death forty three
years later, William James had turned the small amount
of money he left Ireland with into one of the largest
fortunes in the young United States of America.
In 1793 William James was working in a dry goods store
in Albany as a clerk. In 1795 he opened his own store
dealing in farm produce and dry goods, and two years
later he opened a second store in the dock area for
the procurement of goods. By 1805 William James was
running five business establishments in Albany and one
on John Street in New York City. He also had built himself
a tobacco factory. These were noted events in Albany
a settlement with less than 4000 people in the 1790's.
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William James decided
Albany was a great location for trade, with the Mohawk
and nearby Hudson river flowing through the woodlands
140 miles south to New York City and the Atlantic Ocean.
Many events at that time contributed to the wealth and
growth of Albany, and William James was involved in
most of them. In 1797 Albany became the state capital
of New York. Privately constructed toll roads were built
connecting the rest of the state with the capital. A
sense of importance entered Albany's atmosphere. In
1803 New York State Bank opened in Albany and William
James was a director. The bank was capitalized at $460.000.
In 1807 Robert Fulton's sidewinder steamboat made the
trip from Jersey City and docked in Albany in thirty
hours. The trip from New York City to Albany by coach
took three days. Now commerce between Albany and New
York City expanded rapidly. William James lead the way
shipping wheat, flax, timber, and seeds down the Hudson
River to New York City to his agent there James McBride.
William James bought his own docking rights at the bottom
of Greenwich Village, and many of the consignments arriving
there from Albany, were shipped on the Dublin Packet
to Ireland.
William James's Irish origins set him
apart from the new merchants who were beginning to dominate
Albany. They were mostly Dutch and English in the beginning
of the nineteenth century. William James was something
of an outsider, and was not listed in Albany's social
directory until twelve years after its launch in 1817.
But William James was determined to overcome this by
further expansion of his commercial interest with other
Irish-American families in New York State.
Elizabeth Tillman the first wife of
William James died in childbirth after giving her husband
twin boys in 1779. In 1798 William James married his
second wife Mary Ann Connolly from Co Armagh Ireland.
There was evidence that Mary Ann may have been the real
love of William's life. But she too died at childbirth,
She was twenty years old. Her father Bernard Connolly
was a well to do merchant with a 600 acre farm in Mohawk
New York. Bernard Connolly's brother Michael dealt extensively
in New York land, and his business partner was the prosperous
Eberezer Stevens.
William James now thirty two married
Catherine Barber whose grandparents were from Co Longford
Ireland. Catherine was a stronger woman than William's
first two wife's, and gave birth to ten children, eight
of whom survived. Catherine herself outlived William
by twenty seven years. It was a great benefit to William
James that his third wife's family owned the Albany
Register, a weekly newspaper which William James would
regularly announce some new venture.
In 1802 William James was naturalized
as a citizen of the United States of America. In 1818
he handed over management of his commercial business
to his twenty two year old son Robert James, which only
lasted three years with the death of Robert at twenty
five.
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William James would
no longer devote his time to his chain of stores or
his import and export business. He would put that in
the hands of one of his sons in Albany, and James McBride
in New York City. From now on he would concentrate on
matters of finance and investment, and while continuing
to serve as director of New York State Bank, he became
vice president of Albany Saving Bank it opened in 1820.
In his official duties he oversaw the granting of loans,
the negotiation of mortgages, and he entered real estate
in an enormous scale.
William James owned the land Columbia
College was built on in Manhattan, he acquired buildings
and land all across the state, in Troy, Utica, Rochester,
Buffalo, and he was the virtual owner of Union College
in Schenectady. But the most amazing deal came in 1824
when he bought the village of Syracuse. It was not much
of a village, 250 acres of marshland and fever infested
swamps, it was enough to make an owl weep to fly over
it. But it contain salt and William James bought it
for $30.000. The vast under taking of making Syracuse
livable was carried out by the newly formed Syracuse
Company of which William James was President. The Syracuse
Company cleared, drained, graded, built buildings, and
sold lots. The Syracuse Company loaned money to newcomers
so they could establish themselves. By 1830 they had
sold 320 lots at $620 each. It was a superb capitalistic
project.
William James also bought the Saratoga
Salt Company, which produced 400.000 bushels of salt
a year. To get some idea as to the kind of money William
James was making. It was said that by 1846 $3.500.000
had been paid to New York State in salt taxes alone,
and William James was president of all these companies,
and he was a persuasive tyrant, it was said when William
James came to town things went as he wished.
His son Henry James Senior as he would
be known as when he became father of the geniuses, was
born to Catherine Barber, William James's third wife.
Henry attended Albany Academy, where Joseph Henry the
great scientist was at that time a young science teacher.
Young Henry James had a habit of joining the young teacher
in experiments. One of which was flying balloons made
from muslin which was powered skyward by a fixed ball
of hemp soaked in turpentine and ignited. The balloon
rose skyward until the balloon caught fire and burned
out. Then the hemp ball crashed to the ground, where
it would be kicked around by the boys until it extinguished.
One day the ball was kicked into the hay loft over the
stable, Henry James climbed into the hay loft and began
stamping out the fire, he had earlier got some turpentine
splashed in his pants, and his right leg caught fire.
He was rescued but received severe burns to his leg.
During the months that followed he was confined to bed.
He underwent two amputations without anesthetic. by
the time this sixteen year old left the hospital he
had lost his right leg to a point above the knee. It
was his father William's reaction that stayed in Henry's
memory all his life. His father's anguish at the sight
of the surgeon's knife cutting into his son's leg was
such, that Catherine James was hard put to stop her
husband from attacking the surgeon. The display of his
father's tenderness and compassion give young Henry
an exalted sense of his affection, and at that moment
obliterated the sense of paternal apathy. If we take
a look at William James of Albany in 1827, we see a
big well built man, clean shaven, with healthy Irish
looks, cold black eyes not easily forgotten, black hair,
self centered, entrepreneurial, organized, humorless,
possessing an extraordinary power to attract.
In 1828 Henry entered Union College
in Schenectady, twelve miles north of Albany on the
Mohawk River. Union College offered at that time the
finest education in New York State. However Henry spent
most of his time partying with his fellow students who
helped their crippled classmate around campus, until
later in the year Henry was fitted with a wooden leg.
and was then able to get around on his own. Henry got
his zest for life back, and lived it in a style that
angered his father. He ran up bills all over town, the
taverns, bookstores, tailors, and he charged it all
to his father. Henry received a letter from his father's
financial accountant Archibald McIntyre, "I consider
you on the very verge of ruin" and instructed Henry
to spend no more money without his father's approval.
Some of his family considered him already lost. Within
a few weeks Henry fled from Union College, moved to
Boston and got himself a job with a newspaper. Nonetheless
after a few weeks Henry was persuaded to return to Union
College. William James influence was not restricted
to Albany, it was felt at Union College where young
Henry was enrolled. William James was one of the two
men that were the Board of Trustees, William James held
the mortgage on Union College for its entire valuation.
In 1823 William James was a leading
citizen of Albany and he was elected chairman of the
Committee of Citizens of Albany, at the opening of the
eastern section of the Erie Canal when the first boat
sailed through. When William addressed the crowd at
the opening ceremonies, William James said, "The
canal was a work that sheds luster on the United States,
bearing the stamp of the enterprising spirit and resolution
which declared our Independence". This thought
led the migrant from Kurish, Bailieborough, County Cavan.,
to make known the advantages of the New World Freedoms
for all. He continued, "With the perpetual example
of despotism of wretchedness in the Old World before
our eyes, we may look forward with a well founded hope
that neither tyrannical aristocracies nor intriguing
demagogues can ever succeed in corrupting our citizens
or blighting our liberties".
Then James lapsed into a typical Jamesian
moment, he said that he had not originally grasped the
enormity of the project. However he had signed a petition
in 1816 with Archbald McIntyre, urging the legislature
to vote for building the canal. "But now I feel
an emotion, Something like been born again partaking
in the opening festivities of this day". James's
oration which took more than an hour to deliver, exemplified
the gains the canal would bring, and the greatness of
the country in which such an accomplishment was possible.
In his later years William James became
as much respected for his charitable activities and
participation in public life as for his financial exploits.
He was on every civic committee and showed up at every
important event. He died December 19th 1832 a few days
short of his sixty first birthday.
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