1731-1927
Guide to the Microfilm Edition
Microfilming and published guide supported by the National Historical
Publications and Records Commission. Online finding aid sponsored by the
Massachusetts Society of the Cincinnati.
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| Creator: | Pickering, Timothy, 1745-1829 |
| Title: | Timothy Pickering papers |
| Dates: | 1731-1927 |
| Physical Description: | 69
document boxes, 6 volumes, and 1 oversize box |
| Call Number: | Ms. N-708 |
| Microfilm Call Number: | P-31, 69 reels |
| Repository: | Massachusetts Historical Society 1154 Boylston Street Boston, MA 02215
library@masshist.org |
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Abstract:
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This collection consists of the papers of Timothy
Pickering, Revolutionary army officer and statesman, and includes
correspondence, business and legal documents, and other papers, as well as some
papers of Pickering's sons John, Henry, and Octavius.
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Biographical Sketch
Timothy Pickering (1745-1829) spent his youth on his family's farm in Salem,
Massachusetts. After graduating from Harvard in 1763, he returned to Salem,
where he became a prominent figure in the town, holding a variety of local
offices. As colonel of the local militia, he set out to improve troop
discipline. He argued with a local doctor over his management of smallpox
inoculation in the town, and the doctor challenged him to a duel. He also
criticized the theological conservatism of the local minister and eventually
withdrew from his church. In all these controversies, Pickering defended his
position in the local newspaper.
When the Revolution broke out, Pickering was well prepared. Though his
militia arrived too late to fight in the battles of Lexington and Concord on
April 19, 1775, he took an active part in the defense of the New England coast
and, late in 1776, led a contingent to join George Washington's army in New
York. For the most part, however, Pickering's career during the war was in
administration rather than on the field of combat. He attracted Washington's
attention and was appointed adjutant general. He then served on the Board of
War and, in 1780, became quartermaster general. Before he left the post in
1785, he had prepared comprehensive plans for a peacetime military
establishment.
In 1783, Pickering had sided with the instigators of the "Newburgh Revolt"
and resented the charges made against them. By the end of the Revolution, weary
of public service and its insufficient pay, he left the quartermaster
generalship and began a trading operation with his friend Samuel Hodgdon, a
merchant in Philadelphia. By 1785, he had acquired a large speculative interest
in the Wyoming Valley of Pennsylvania. When that area was organized as Luzerne
County, with its seat at Wilkes-Barre, Pickering secured a blanket appointment
to the county offices. Charged by the state authorities with settling
conflicting land claims and establishing order, he found himself in the middle
of the dispute between the Connecticut and Pennsylvania claimants. On one
occasion, he was kidnapped by the Connecticut faction and kept prisoner in the
woods. Unable to convince Pickering to recognize their claim, they let him go
after twenty days.
In 1790, with the removal of the capital to Philadelphia, Pickering, who was
having some difficulty supporting his family as a farmer, applied to Washington
for a position in the federal government. One of the most significant problems
facing the new government was relations with the Indians, and the president
asked Pickering to undertake negotiations with the Senecas in western
Pennsylvania. Pickering, an able negotiator with a sincere interest in
developing a more humane policy toward the Indians, successfully concluded the
mission, as well as a later one to the Iroquois. These successes led Washington
to name him postmaster general, then secretary of war, and finally secretary of
state. As postmaster general, Pickering increased the efficiency of the postal
system, and as secretary of war, he oversaw the build-up of the navy that would
prove so important in the undeclared war with France a few years later.
Pickering's career as secretary of state, however, was less auspicious.
Having played a leading role in the dismissal of Edmund Randolph, his
predecessor, Pickering served as acting secretary of state, as well as
secretary of war, while Washington searched for a permanent appointment. After
an unsuccessful search, Washington asked Pickering to step down as secretary of
war and accept the state position on a permanent basis. As secretary of state,
Pickering supervised the implementation of Jay's Treaty, which he did so
effectively that when John Adams succeeded Washington as president, Pickering
was asked to remain at his post. He held the office until just before Adams
left office.
The major diplomatic issue during Pickering's tenure as secretary of state
was Franco-American relations. Pickering was strongly opposed to the French
Revolution and the pro-French Jeffersonians. He quarreled with the French
minister Pierre-Auguste Adet, helping to bring about the minister's recall and
the rupture of diplomatic relations with France. He had a similar quarrel with
the Spanish minister Carlos Martinez de Yrujo y Tacon. After the failure of the
XYZ mission--a move he had opposed--Pickering was angry at Elbridge Gerry for
remaining in Paris and quarreled with President Adams over the question of
censuring Gerry. With the publication of the XYZ dispatches and the ensuing war
fever, Pickering became one of the main architects of the Federalist policy
that sought war with France, as well as a strong supporter of the Alien and
Sedition Acts. More and more estranged from John Adams, he opposed the
president's nominations of William S. Smith and Henry Knox as adjutant general
and second-in-command of the army. When Adams proposed a new mission to France,
Pickering tried to block the program. He secretly conferred with Alexander
Hamilton and other leading Federalists, reporting to them what went on in
cabinet meetings with the president. Because of Pickering's continued
opposition, Adams dismissed him from office in May 1800.
For the rest of Pickering's public career, as senator and representative, he
remained a fervent anti-Jeffersonian. He was dismayed by the election of Thomas
Jefferson and by Republican control of Congress, and he strongly opposed the
Louisiana Purchase, fearing that as western states multiplied in number, New
England would lose significance on the national stage. Pickering even
considered secession, borrowing the basic principle of Jefferson's own "compact
theory" to justify the move. Though he could find little support for his
separatist movement in 1804 and was forced to lay it aside, his opposition to
Jefferson continued. In a famous letter to Governor James Sullivan in 1808,
Pickering wrote a powerful attack on the Embargo Act.
When the War of 1812 broke out, Pickering urged the New England states to
refuse to cooperate with the federal government or to supply any troops or
money to the war effort. Once again, he weighed the possibility of secession,
but his position was too extreme, even for his supporters, and the Treaty of
Ghent and the battle of New Orleans put to rest any lingering hopes of a
separate union.
Pickering's last years were spent in Salem as one of the town's leading
citizens. He pursued his life-long interest in agriculture and encouraged
scientific farming, agricultural fairs, animal husbandry, and the development
of a new type of plow. In his spare time, he began to assemble documentary
material from which he planned to write a history of the Revolution and the
early days of the Republic, but he didn't live to complete the project. He
still occasionally became involved in political controversy. When letters
between John Adams and William Cunningham were published in 1824, Pickering
wrote a rebuttal of many of the statements made in them. And in 1828, when John
Quincy Adams was running for re-election, Pickering endorsed his opponent
Andrew Jackson.
Biographical Timeline
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17 July 1745
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Born in Salem, Massachusetts.
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1763
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Graduated from Harvard College.
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1768
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Admitted to the bar.
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1771-1775
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Held several offices in Salem, including membership in the Committee of
Correspondence.
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1775
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Elected colonel in the Essex County militia.
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8 Apr. 1776
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Married Rebecca White.
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1777
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Appointed adjutant general.
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Nov. 1777
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Appointed to the Board of War.
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1780-1785
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Quartermaster general.
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1783
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Entered partnership with Samuel Hodgdon, merchant of
Philadelphia.
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1785
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Began land speculations in Pennsylvania.
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1786
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Appointed clerk, recorder, and judge of Luzerne County,
Pennsylvania.
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1787
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Moved to Wilkes-Barre.
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1790-1791
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United States commissioner to treat with the Seneca Indians.
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1791
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Appointed postmaster general.
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1793
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Mission to the Western Indians.
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1794
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United States commissioner to treat with the Iroquois.
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1795
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Appointed secretary of war.
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Aug. 1795
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Acting secretary of state.
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Dec. 1795
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Permanent secretary of state.
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12 May 1800
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Dismissed from office. Moved to Easton, Pennsylvania.
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1801
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Returned permanently to Massachusetts.
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1803-1811
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United States senator.
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1813-1817
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United States representative.
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1817-1818
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Governor's councillor.
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1817-1829
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Retirement. Gathered material for a history of the American Revolution.
Letters and articles on agriculture and the political struggles of the
Washington, Adams, Jefferson, and Madison administrations.
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29 Jan. 1829
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Died in Salem.
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Clarfield, Gerard H. Timothy Pickering and
American Diplomacy, 1795-1800. Columbia: University of Missouri Press,
c1969.
McLean, David. Timothy Pickering and the Age of
the American Revolution. New York: Arno Press, 1982.
Pickering, Octavius, and Charles Wentworth Upham.
The Life of Timothy Pickering. Boston: Little,
Brown and Company, 1867-1873.
Prentiss, Hervey Putnam. Timothy Pickering as
the Leader of New England Federalism, 1800-1815. New York: Da Capo
Press, 1972.
Professor Edward H. Phillips of Austin College, whose sketch of Pickering
appears on reel 69 of this collection.
The Timothy Pickering papers consist of 69 microfilm reels of family and
general correspondence; business and legal papers concerning land speculations
at Wyoming Valley, Pa., western Virginia, Stokes and Surry Counties, N.C., and
concerning the Potter Land Company; military papers; agricultural papers;
papers (1786-1809) concerning Pickering's missions to the Indians;
correspondence, official documents, and historical notebooks collected for a
proposed history of the United States during the Revolution; political
notebooks and journals; account books (1780-1784) of the quartermaster
general's office; pamphlets; newsclippings; legal papers (1777-1799) of
Pickering's son Octavius; and papers of his sons, John and Henry, and their
families. Pickering's chief correspondents were his wife Rebecca and his eldest
son John.
Other collections of Timothy Pickering papers include: 11 volumes of
broadsides, newspapers, letters, and documents related to Pickering's military
and agricultural pursuits, located at the Essex Institute, Salem, Mass.; a
number of papers related to Pickering's service as quartermaster general, given
to the quartermaster general's office in 1909 by Henry Goddard Pickering, now
located at the Washington's Headquarters Museum in Newburgh, N.Y.; letters from
the quartermaster general's office, located at the New York Historical Society;
letters and papers related to Pickering's land ventures in Pennsylvania, at the
Wyoming Historical and Geological Society in Wilkes-Barre, Penn.; an orderly
book ca. 1778 and other papers at the New York Public Library; and a collection
of copies at the Library of Congress. Other Pickering material can be found at
the Huntington Library, the Clements Library, the libraries of Harvard, Yale,
and Duke Universities and of Marietta College, and, of course, in the collected
papers of most of the major political figures of his day, including George
Washington. A large number of Timothy Pickering's official papers are held by
the National Archives and are available in the National Archives' microfilm
publications.
The bulk of this collection (vol. 5-62) was a gift from Henry Pickering in
1874. Additional gifts were made in 1941 (by Mrs. Richard Y. Fitzgerald) and in
1953. Four volumes of family letters (vol. 1-4) were loaned by John Pickering
of Salem, Mass. for this microfilm edition.
The collection is organized into the following series:
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| I. Correspondence, 1760-1829 |
| | A. Letters from Timothy to Rebecca Pickering, 1775-1827 |
| | B. Letters from Rebecca to Timothy Pickering, 1780-1817 |
| | C. Letters from Timothy to John Pickering, 1786-1829 |
| | D. Timothy Pickering correspondence, 1760-1829 |
| II. Notebooks, clippings, and miscellaneous papers, 1756-1859 |
| III. Wyoming Valley papers, 1755-1804 |
| IV. Papers of Pickering's missions to the Indians, 1786-1809 |
| V. Business and legal papers, 1731-1848 |
| VI. Papers of John, Henry, and Octavius Pickering, 1780?-1927 |
| VII. Miscellaneous volumes, 1781-[1811] |
| VIII. Addenda |
Several indexes to this collection have been compiled at different times to
help researchers locate specific items. Some items are listed in more than one
index, but no one index contains a complete list of all items in the
collection.
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| 1. The Historical Index to the Pickering
Papers, published in Collections of the
Massachusetts Historical Society, 6th series, vol. 8 (1896), provides
detailed descriptions of documents in volumes 5-62. This 580-page publication,
located in the MHS reference room and at libraries throughout the United
States, includes abstracts of individual items and references to the volume and
page number of each item. Note: Because the
Historical Index is so comprehensive, the
descriptions
below for volumes 5-62 are brief. |
| 2. The printed Guide to the Microfilm Edition of
the Timothy Pickering Papers, sponsored by the National Historical
Publications and Records Commission and published by the MHS in 1966, contains
an alphabetical list of select correspondents in volumes 1-4 and 63-67. This
publication contains references to volume numbers only. It is located in the
MHS reference room and at libraries throughout the United States. |
| 3. The MHS card catalog contains brief descriptions of individual items
with references to the volume and page number of each item. These catalog cards
have been published in the Catalog of Manuscripts of the
Massachusetts Historical Society (G.K. Hall & Co., 1969), located
in the MHS reference room and at libraries throughout the United States. |
| 4. An index of names in volumes 5-62 is located on reel 69 of this
collection. This index includes references to volumes and page numbers, but no
descriptions of items. |
| 5. A calendar of items in volumes 1-4 and 63-66 is located on reel 69 of
this collection. This calendar consists of a list of items in the order in
which they appear on the microfilm, with summaries and page numbers. |
| 6. Most of volumes 5-62 have individual indexes that are reproduced at
the start of each reel. |
Note: Documents in this collection have been
microfilmed based on their prior arrangement into bound volumes. Each of the 69
volumes has been microfilmed onto a separate reel, so reel numbers in this
guide correspond to volume numbers. For example, reel 1 contains volume 1, reel
2 contains volume 2, etc.
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| Reel/Volume | Contents |
| I. Correspondence,
1760-1829
This series is divided into four subseries: A. Letters from Timothy to
Rebecca Pickering; B. Letters from Rebecca to Timothy Pickering; C. Letters
from Timothy to John Pickering; and D. Timothy Pickering correspondence.
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| | A. Letters from Timothy to Rebecca Pickering,
1775-1827 |
| Reel/Vol. 1 | | | 1775-1783 Beginning with four letters of courtship, this volume documents several long
separations during Pickering's service in the Revolution as a militia colonel,
adjutant general, member of the Board of War, and quartermaster general. Most
of the letters were written from headquarters in Pennsylvania and New York,
where Pickering recorded random glimpses of the war, but official duties are
mentioned only briefly. One letter includes a map of Howe's operations on the
Delaware and a description of the defenses around the city (p. 66). Another
recounts the army's reaction to news of the victory at Saratoga (p. 68). And a
long series, beginning on page 215, describes the Yorktown campaign in some
detail. A group of letters written at Valley Forge and originally bound with
the volume have apparently disappeared.
The majority of the correspondence is devoted to personal matters. Pickering
frequently urged his wife to pull up stakes and follow him. In a series of
letters in the summer of 1778, he proposed the removal of the family from Salem
to Philadelphia, and letters dated November 1780 include instructions and lists
to help them in another move, this time from Philadelphia to Newburgh. A long
letter of March 25, 1783, discusses Pickering's plans to establish himself as a
merchant in Philadelphia at the end of the war.
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| Reel/Vol. 2 | | | 1784-1803 This volume begins with letters describing Pickering's efforts to develop
his land in the Wyoming Valley and his two excursions to Philadelphia to attend
the state conventions of 1787 and 1790. Problems of frontier government and the
Connecticut claims are mentioned only briefly, one exception being Pickering's
description of his abduction in 1788 by partisans of John Franklin (p. 39).
Letters from two of Pickering's Indian missions include criticism of the
government's Indian policy and remarks on the defeat of St. Clair in 1791 (p.
137 ff.). The rest of the volume covers the first
months of Pickering's term as postmaster general, 1791-1792; his mission to the
western Indians in 1793 and the successful negotiations at Canandaigua the
following year; his visits to his property at the Great Bend of the Susquehanna
in 1800 and 1801; a journey to Massachusetts in February 1801; and the
beginning of his first session in the United States Senate in 1803.
The following subjects are not covered in this volume: Pickering's business
partnership with Samuel Hodgdon, his land investments, and his terms as
secretary of war and secretary of state.
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| Reel/Vol. 3 | | | 1804-1827 Most of the letters in this volume were written from Washington, D.C.,
during Pickering's twelve years in the Senate and the House. However, this
volume contains no letters from the fall of 1804; these, along with most of the
1805, 1808, and 1809 letters, and several from 1806 and 1807, are located in
volume 4(i).
The mental illness of his son William formed a major theme in Pickering's
correspondence between 1804 and 1807. Pickering also wrote about his land
speculations and his desire for a farmer's life in a letter of March 29, 1806.
Other subjects discussed in these letters include: Pickering's political
opinions, particularly his opposition to Jeffersonian foreign policy; many
events of the Jefferson and Madison administrations, including the Burr
conspiracy, the Chesapeake incident, Pickering's public letter to Governor
Sullivan, his censure by the Senate in 1811, and his "address to the people of
the U. States," written in March of the same year; the War of 1812 and war
expenditures; the Hartford Convention and New England's mission to oppose the
war (p. 185 ff.); and the British attack on New
Orleans (p. 195 ff.).
Following the war, Pickering's correspondence becomes more personal,
especially his letters regarding the marriage of his daughter Elizabeth to
Hammond Dorsey, a relative of Pickering's friends the Hansons and Ridgeleys of
Maryland. A group of letters written in 1821 and 1822 cover the long
negotiations in Philadelphia to settle the affairs of the Potter Land
Company.
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| Reel/Vol. 4(i) | | | 1777-1820 Most of the letters in this volume date from 1782, 1796, and 1804-1810,
filling gaps in the previous volumes. Pickering's Revolutionary letters,
written from Philadelphia and the Hudson River, deal primarily with family
matters. A recurring theme, expressed in letters dated September 6, 1782 and
February 10, 1805, is Pickering's desire to leave public life and enjoy the
"ease and tranquility of a private citizen." Among the correspondence dealing
with the illnesses of the Pickering children is a letter from Benjamin Rush
discussing Timothy Pickering, Jr.'s cancer treatment. Letters throughout the
volume, such as one dated December 20, 1806, contain Pickering's criticisms of
Jefferson and the Embargo policy. Other topics include the trial of Justice
Chase and the Burr conspiracy.
The letters of Pickering's Congressional career are not arranged in
chronological order. This volume also contains a series of letters with
uncertain dates (p. 184 ff.), the earliest of
which was apparently written in 1777.
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| Reel/Vol. 4(i) | | B. Letters from Rebecca to Timothy Pickering,
1780-1817
Rebecca Pickering's letters to her husband contain family news and details
of domestic life, including child rearing, coping with servants, managing the
farm, and dealing with the severe mental illnesses of two of her sons. The
letters were written from the many locations in which the family settled:
Salem, Philadelphia, Newburgh and New Windsor, the Falls of Schuylkill,
Wilkes-Barre, and several towns in Massachusetts. This volume also contains
several letters to Mrs. Lois Gooll and others.
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| Reel/Vol. 4(ii) | | C. Letters from Timothy to John Pickering,
1786-1829
Beginning with a single letter to George Williams, this volume primarily
consists of Timothy Pickering's correspondence with his closest confidant, his
eldest son John. The early letters contain advice, encouragement, and
suggestions for John's education in Massachusetts, especially during his years
at Harvard. The letters from 1797-1801 were written to John Pickering at
Lisbon, where he was secretary to the American minister William Smith, and at
London, where he lived with Rufus King. The main topics are American foreign
policy, particularly the French negotiations, and John's plans for a future
career. A long letter of May 27, 1800, describes Pickering's dismissal from the
Department of State and analyzes President Adams' motives. A letter of June 7
contains some bitter criticism of the president, as well as Pickering's plans
for settling on his property in northeastern Pennsylvania.
After 1803, the bulk of the correspondence consists of Federalist sentiments
and strategy, covering nearly all the important political and legislative
issues of the period. In addition to constant attacks on Jefferson and Madison,
the letters contain trenchant comments on Aaron Burr (p. 368), Senator Robert
Wright (p. 439), John Randolph (pp. 443, 818), John Adams (p. 675), and
Elbridge Gerry (p. 806). Important documents include an extract of a letter
allegedly written by John Adams to Josiah Dean, stating his preference for the
embargo rather than war (p. 642); a letter of March 3, 1810, detailing
Pickering's thoughts on the character of George Washington, the authorship of
Washington's farewell address, and Hamilton's influence over Washington; a
memorandum on impressment (p. 741); copies of letters to George Cabot (p. 567)
and Governor Caleb Strong (p. 828); and a letter of January 8, 1815, describing
the consequences of a British victory at New Orleans.
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| | D. Timothy Pickering correspondence,
1760-1829
This subseries consists of letters from and to Timothy Pickering in
alternating chronological sequences: letters from Pickering, 1772-1829; letters
to Pickering, 1773-1829; letters from Pickering, 1763-1828; and letters to
Pickering, 1760-1829. Note: Documents have been
microfilmed based on their prior arrangement into bound volumes.
|
| | | Letters from Timothy Pickering,
1772-1829 |
| Reel/Vol. 5 | | | | 1772-1787 |
| Reel/Vol. 6 | | | | 1788-1797 |
| Reel/Vol. 7 | | | | Aug.-Dec. 1797 |
| Reel/Vol. 8 | | | | Jan.-June 1798 |
| Reel/Vol. 9 | | | | July-Nov. 1798 |
| Reel/Vol. 10 | | | | Dec. 1798-Apr. 1799 |
| Reel/Vol. 11 | | | | May-Aug. 1799 |
| Reel/Vol. 12 | | | | Sep.-Dec. 1799 |
| Reel/Vol. 13 | | | | 1800 |
| Reel/Vol. 14 | | | | 1801-1813 |
| Reel/Vol. 15 | | | | 1814-1824 |
| Reel/Vol. 16 | | | | 1825-1829 |
| | | Letters to Timothy Pickering,
1773-1829 |
| Reel/Vol. 17 | | | | 1773-1779 |
| Reel/Vol. 18 | | | | 1780-1785 |
| Reel/Vol. 19 | | | | 1786-1794 |
| Reel/Vol. 20 | | | | 1795-1796 |
| Reel/Vol. 21 | | | | 1797 |
| Reel/Vol. 22 | | | | Jan.-July 1798 |
| Reel/Vol. 23 | | | | Aug.-Dec. 1798 |
| Reel/Vol. 24 | | | | Jan.-June 1799 |
| Reel/Vol. 25 | | | | July-Dec. 1799 |
| Reel/Vol. 26 | | | | 1800-1803 |
| Reel/Vol. 27 | | | | 1804-1806 |
| Reel/Vol. 28 | | | | 1807-1808 |
| Reel/Vol. 29 | | | | 1809-1811 |
| Reel/Vol. 30 | | | | 1812-1815 |
| Reel/Vol. 31 | | | | 1816-1822 |
| Reel/Vol. 32 | | | | 1823-1829 |
| | | Letters from Timothy Pickering,
1763-1828 |
| Reel/Vol. 33 | | | | 1763-1781 |
| Reel/Vol. 34 | | | | 1782-1785 |
| Reel/Vol. 35 | | | | 1786-1795 |
| Reel/Vol. 36 | | | | 1796 |
| Reel/Vol. 37 | | | | 1797-1799 |
| Reel/Vol. 38 | | | | 1800-1828 |
| | | Letters to Timothy Pickering,
1760-1829 |
| Reel/Vol. 39 | | | | 1760-1781 |
| Reel/Vol. 40 | | | | 1782-1790 |
| Reel/Vol. 41 | | | | 1791-1797 |
| Reel/Vol. 42 | | | | 1798-1802 |
| Reel/Vol. 43 | | | | 1803-1811 |
| Reel/Vol. 44 | | | | 1812-1829 |
| Reel/Vol. 45 | | | | 1787-1828 |
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| | | | | |
| Reel/Volume | Contents |
| II. Notebooks, clippings, and miscellaneous papers,
1756-1859
This series consists of printed matter and miscellaneous papers, including
notebooks in which Pickering wrote about politics, prominent contemporary and
historical figures, agriculture, and other topics.
For other clippings and pamphlets, see Series VII
(Miscellaneous volumes).
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| Reel/Vol. 45 | | Agricultural papers,
1780-1828 |
| Reel/Vol. 46 | | Timothy Pickering's notebooks, Volumes A-E,
ca. 1817-1828 "Miscellaneous observations and notes" on politics, agriculture, and other
subjects.
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| Reel/Vol. 47 | | Timothy Pickering's notebooks, Volumes F-H,
1828-Jan. 1829 "Miscellaneous observations and notes" on politics, agriculture, and other
subjects.
|
| Reel/Vol. 48 | | Five pamphlets by Timothy Pickering,
1808-1814 |
| Reel/Vol. 48 | | Newspaper clippings,
1808-1813 |
| Reel/Vol. 49 | | Two pamphlets by Timothy Pickering,
1811,
1814 |
| Reel/Vol. 49 | | Newspaper clippings,
1809-1859 |
| Reel/Vol. 50 | | Political notebooks,
ca. 1820s |
| Reel/Vol. 51-52 | | Political and historical notebooks,
ca. 1820s |
| Reel/Vol. 53 | | Miscellaneous notebooks and clippings,
1756-1801 |
| Reel/Vol. 54 | | Miscellaneous political papers,
1798-1812 |
| Reel/Vol. 55 | | Miscellaneous political papers,
1813-1829 |
| Reel/Vol. 56 | | Military papers,
1767-1792
For records related to Pickering's tenure as
quartermaster general, see Series VII (Miscellaneous volumes).
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| | | | | |
| Reel/Volume | Contents |
| III. Wyoming Valley papers,
1755-1804
For other documents related to Pickering's land
speculations, see Series V (Business and legal papers).
|
| Reel/Vol. 57 | | 1755-1787 |
| Reel/Vol. 58 | | 1787-1804 |
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| | | | | |
| Reel/Volume | Contents |
| IV. Papers of Pickering's missions to the Indians,
1786-1809 |
| Reel/Vol. 59 | | 1786-1805 |
| Reel/Vol. 60 | | 1791-1809 |
| Reel/Vol. 61 | | 1790-1791 |
| Reel/Vol. 62 | | 1792-1797 |
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| | | | | |
| Reel/Volume | Contents |
| V. Business and legal papers,
1731-1848
This series contains a variety of documents and correspondence that deal
primarily with Pickering's land speculations.
For other documents related to Pickering's land
speculations, see Series III (Wyoming Valley papers).
|
| Reel/Vol. 63 | | 1731-1799 The volume begins with a small number of pre-Revolutionary vouchers, powers
of attorney, and other papers of the Pickering family, followed by a
miscellaneous group of papers of the quartermaster general's office
(1778-1789), including requisition lists, salary receipts, bills of lading, and
a series of documents related to the mustering out of Massachusetts officers in
1783 and 1784. The rest of the volume details Pickering's extensive land
speculations. Documents include tax lists, receipts, and lists of property
holdings in several states. Pickering's speculations with Samuel Hodgdon in
western Virginia are mentioned in a letter from William Lambert and in tax
lists for 1789-1790 (p. 293). His more important investments in
Pennsylvania--where he joined Hodgdon, Tench Coxe, Duncan Ingraham, Jr., Andrew
Craigie, and Miers Fisher in the Potter Land Company in 1785--are summarized in
several lists of holdings on pages 272, 285, and 499. Correspondence on the
subject includes letters from Putnam Catlin, Samuel Hodgdon, Matthias
Hollenback, Samuel Andrew Law, and Peter Muhlenberg.
Pickering's purchase of large tracts in Stokes and Surry Counties, N.C., is
documented in thirteen letters from the seller, Gottlieb Shober, to Pickering,
and three from Pickering to Shober. Other papers include several summaries of
this correspondence (pp. 364, 367); survey reports and descriptions, scattered
from pages 333 to 437; and a large number of receipts. Letters include: one
from Samuel Andrew Law discussing the market for southern land; one from
Pickering to Theodore Lyman; another from Pickering to George Williams,
summarizing his land transactions; and one from Zachariah Maclin describing an
altercation with the Indians in Tennessee.
Included in this and subsequent volumes are legal papers of Pickering's son
Octavius, most of them related to the estate of Alexander Shepard, Jr., of
Newton. The earliest of Octavius Pickering's documents, a grant of land in
Cumberland County, Maine, dates from 1777 (p. 20).
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| Reel/Vol. 64 | | 1800-1813 The volume begins with a series of receipts for food, lodgings, and services
related to Pickering's improvements to his Pennsylvania land. Title disputes
with squatters and with the rival Delaware Company are described in letters
from Ebenezer Bowman, Tench Coxe, Anne Francis, Thomas Harris, Samuel Hodgdon,
and Richard Peters, as well as three from Pickering to Mrs. Francis. Litigation
arising from these disputes is described in papers dated 1802 (pp. 119, 120,
133). Other documents include tax lists (pp. 111, 225); a summary of the
partners' holdings in 1808 (p. 355); a series of letters to the heirs of
Alexander Hamilton (p. 180); Pickering's instructions for the survey of land on
Snake Creek (p. 75); powers of attorney to Samuel Hodgdon (pp. 115, 163, 165)
and Putnam Catlin (p. 426); and several papers dealing with the selection of a
seat for Susquehanna County (pp. 388, 407, 409).
Subjects discussed in the letters include: Pickering's business in North
Carolina, his failure to profit from the land, his relations with Gottlieb
Shober, his speculations in Ohio, his investment in Kentucky, and land taxes in
Virginia. Among the correspondents are: Shober, William Davie, Joseph Lord,
Thomas Worthington, Hugh Boyle, Theodore Foster, Lewis Cass, General John
Adair, and Edward Carrington. This volume also contains two bank statements
from Timothy Williams of Boston that document Pickering's financial situation
in 1802 and 1803 (pp. 130, 146).
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| Reel/Vol. 65 | | 1814-1823 This volume consists of documents related to the Potter Land Company,
including letters from Pickering to Hugh Brady, John Denniston, Peter S. Du
Ponceau, Samuel Hodgdon, and Thomas Peters. Nine letters from Du Ponceau,
beginning with his appointment as the company's attorney, describe attempts to
keep Tench Coxe under control and to dispose of the company's land. An exchange
between Pickering and James A. Hamilton refers to the holdings of the Hamilton
trust and includes a recollection of a conversation with John Adams on the
president's rejection of Alexander Hamilton as commander-in-chief in 1798 (p.
219).
Correspondence related to a suit against Gottlieb Shober includes letters
from Shober, Peter Browne, William Gaston, and Robert Williams. Pickering's
business in Virginia is discussed in correspondence with his agent William
Prentiss and the state auditor, James E. Heath, as well as in letters from John
G. Gamble and Charles F. Mercer. Other significant items include: papers from
Ohio related to a title dispute with Abel D. Chase; an exchange between Samuel
Hodgdon and Chase; two memoranda from Hodgdon and a deposition from Chase (pp.
225, 230, 352); a group of letters from Hodgdon's attorney and agent Allen
Latham; and letters from John Fowler, Peter Mills, and Benjamin P. Putnam.
Among the small number of Octavius Pickering's letters located in this
volume are letters to his client in the Shepard case, Charles A. Jackson, and a
long memorandum on the duties of a court reporter (p. 133). This volume also
contains several letters related to George Joy's business before the Court of
Reclamation in London. A misplaced paper (p. 250) refers to the settlement of
Timothy Pickering's estate in the early 1830s.
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| Reel/Vol. 66 | | 1824-1848 This short volume consists of records of the Potter Land Company up to
Pickering's death in 1829. Among the correspondence are letters from Peter S.
Du Ponceau, Andrew Gregg, James A. Hamilton, Ralph Peters, and William W.
Potter. Other documents include a power of attorney authorizing Du Ponceau to
negotiate with the trustees of William Bingham (p. 152); Pickering's
depositions in a suit between Alexander Hamilton, Jr., and Henderson and Cairns
of New York (pp. 279, 282); and an agreement between Nicholas Fish, last
surviving trustee of Alexander Hamilton's estate, and the heirs of Timothy
Pickering (p. 289).
This volume also contains business papers of Henry Pickering, including
accounts with J. Webb and Company (Leghorn), Dana and Fenno (Boston), and
Bancroft and Pope (Salem). Papers of the brief partnership of Pickering,
Kendall and Pope (New York) consist of two agreements for the liquidation of
the firm (pp. 211, 217) and six letters from one of the partners, Isaac C.
Kendall. The volume also includes letters from Humphrey Devereux and Frederick
Parker, the latter describing commercial conditions in Genoa.
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| Reel/Vol. 67 | VI. Papers of John, Henry, and Octavius Pickering,
1780?-1927
This volume contains miscellaneous papers of Timothy Pickering and his sons
John, Henry, and Octavius. Among several documents of the quartermaster
general's office are six account books dated 1781-1784. Other Timothy Pickering
papers include two letters to his daughter Elizabeth, a copy of an
advertisement for the Potter Lands (1785?), a contract with the Richmond
merchant William Prentiss (1821?), and several undated maps and papers related
to Pickering's land speculations. Documents dealing with the Pickering estate
include a letter from Henry Chester on the future of the Potter Land Company
and several contracts, dated 1831 and 1838, with the heirs and trustees of
Alexander Hamilton.
Among the papers of Pickering's sons is the will of Timothy Pickering, Jr.,
dated April 18, 1807. John Pickering's papers include an opinion on a case
involving Maine land claimed by Lord Stirling (Aug. 29, 1829) and a number of
letters written to him in his capacity as city solicitor of Boston. The papers
of Henry Pickering deal mainly with business affairs, especially the
liquidation of the firm of Pickering, Kendall and Pope in 1827. A letter from
Henry to Octavius, dated April 1, 1828, and a memorandum of April 4, describe
his dispute with Isaac Kendall. This volume also contains several undated
documents, including manuscript poems and notes on composition, diagrams of an
old Dutch house in New York, and various business papers.
Most of the documents in the volume belong to Octavius Pickering and include
contracts, bills of sale, leases, accounts, court orders, and memoranda related
to the estate of Alexander Shepard, Jr. The volume contains many letters to
Octavius, including a letterbook of correspondence with Shepard's heirs written
in 1819 and 1820, notes written during Octavius' sojourn in England in the
1840s, and a series of business reports from his nephew Edward Pickering.
Other items in this volume include a list of accounts related to George
Joy's business before the Court of Reclamation in London, dated September 27,
1819, and a series of letters from Charles Pickering to his cousin Mary Orne
Pickering describing two voyages: one to South America and the South Pacific
and another to the Mediterranean and the coast of East Africa. Among the
undated material at the end of the volume are a short notebook on family
genealogy belonging to Octavius Pickering and an account book with the New
England Bank belonging to Nathaniel Goddard.
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| Reel/Volume | Contents |
| VII. Miscellaneous volumes,
1781-[1811]
This series contains two volumes kept by Pickering as quartermaster general
and three volumes of printed matter.
For other clippings, pamphlets, and military papers,
see Series II (Notebooks, clippings, and miscellaneous papers).
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| Reel/Vol. 68 | | Account book,
1781-1783 |
| Reel/Vol. 68 | | Receipt book,
Jan. 1782 |
| Reel/Vol. 68 | | Two bound volumes of annotated newspaper clippings Both volumes contain an index.
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| Reel/Vol. 68 | | Bound collection of three of Pickering's pamphlets,
[1811] Pamphlets included in this volume are: the Boston edition of
A Letter from the Hon. Timothy Pickering...exhibiting to
his Constituents a View of the Imminent Danger of an Unnecessary and Ruinous
War. Addressed to His Excellency James Sullivan (Boston, 1808, 16 pp.),
with a note and three additional letters in Pickering's hand; a copy of
Interesting Correspondence between His Excellency
Governour Sullivan and Col. Pickering (Boston, 1808, 32 pp.); and an
unauthorized London edition of some of Pickering's newspaper articles entitled
Letters addressed to the People of the United States of
America, on the Conduct of the Past and Present Administrations of the American
Government, towards Great Britain and France (1811, 168 pp.), with
Pickering's corrections and an additional letter.
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| Reel/Volume | Contents |
| VIII. Addenda |
| Reel/Vol. 69 | | Index of names in volumes 5-62 This index was described by Mr. Edward J. Lowell in a report made to the
Massachusetts Historical Society in 1890 as follows: "There are in the
Pickering Papers a great many names mentioned but briefly and incidentally, or
appearing in lists of members of military companies, in pay-rolls, petitions,
etc. It was not thought best to include these in the general index. We owe,
however, to the diligence of Mr. McCleary [Samuel F. McCleary] a complete
separate index of them all. This index contains about eleven thousand cards,
giving the full name of all persons mentioned in the fifty-eight volumes, with
the exception, sometimes, of those which appear in the general index."
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| Reel/Vol. 69 | | Biographical essay on Timothy Pickering by Professor Edward H.
Phillips of Austin College Typescript.
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| Reel/Vol. 69 | | Calendar of the unindexed papers in volumes 1-4 and
63-66 Typescript.
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Timothy Pickering papers, Massachusetts Historical Society.
This collection is indexed under the following headings in
ABIGAIL,
the online catalog of the Massachusetts Historical Society. Researchers
desiring materials about related persons, organizations, or subjects should
search the catalog using these headings.
| | |
| Persons: |
| | Pickering, Henry, 1781-1838. |
| | Pickering, John, 1777-1846. |
| | Pickering, Octavius, 1791-1868. |
| | Pickering, Rebecca, 1754-1828. |
| | Pickering family. |
| | |
| Organizations: |
| | Potter Land Company. |
| | United States. Army. Quartermaster
General. |
| | |
| Subjects: |
| | Account books--1780-1784. |
| | Indians of North America--Government
relations--1789-1869. |
| | Real property--North Carolina--Stokes
County. |
| | Real property--North Carolina--Surry
County. |
| | Real property--Pennsylvania--Wyoming
Valley. |
| | Real property--Virginia. |
| | United States--History--Revolution,
1775-1783--Equipment and supplies. |
| | United States--History--Revolution,
1775-1783--Personal narratives. |
Photographs from this collection have been removed to the Timothy Pickering
photographs (unprocessed). Photo. Coll. 500.58.
|