Elizabeth Peck Perkins: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Content deleted Content added


Line 2: Line 2:

”’Elizabeth Peck Perkins”’ (1735-1807) was an American shipping magnate.<ref>Elisabeth Williams Anthony Dexter, ”[https://archive.org/stream/careerwomenofame00dext/careerwomenofame00dext_djvu.txt Career women of America, 1776–1840]”, 1950</ref>

”’Elizabeth Peck Perkins”’ (1735-1807) was an American shipping magnate.<ref>Elisabeth Williams Anthony Dexter, ”[https://archive.org/stream/careerwomenofame00dext/careerwomenofame00dext_djvu.txt Career women of America, 1776–1840]”, 1950</ref>

She was the daughter of the fur merchant Thomas Handasyd Peck, wife of the merchant James Perkins (1733–1773) and mother of the [[Boston Brahmin]] [[Thomas Handasyd Perkins]]. She managed the shipping and merchant company of her late spouse, one of the leading companies of Boston, from 1773. During the [[American Revolutionary War]], she participated in shipping troops for the American ally France. In 1800, she was one of the co-founders and financiers of the Boston Female Asylum, the first institution founded by women in Boston, and functioned as its first manager and treasurer.

She was the daughter of the fur merchant Thomas Handasyd Peck, wife of the merchant James Perkins (1733–1773) and mother of the [[Boston Brahmin]] [[Thomas Handasyd Perkins]]. She managed the shipping and merchant company of her late , one of the leading companies of Boston, from 1773. During the [[American Revolutionary War]], she participated in shipping troops for the American ally France. In 1800, she was one of the co-founders and financiers of the Boston Female Asylum, the first institution founded by women in Boston, and functioned as its first manager and treasurer.

==References==

==References==


Revision as of 03:06, 10 January 2026

American shipping magnate

Elizabeth Peck Perkins (1735-1807) was an American shipping magnate.[1]

She was the daughter of the fur merchant Thomas Handasyd Peck, wife of the merchant James Perkins (1733–1773) and mother of the Boston Brahmin Thomas Handasyd Perkins. She managed the shipping and merchant company of her late husband, one of the leading companies of Boston, from 1773. During the American Revolutionary War, she participated in shipping troops for the American ally France. In 1800, she was one of the co-founders and financiers of the Boston Female Asylum, the first institution founded by women in Boston, and functioned as its first manager and treasurer.

References

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top