Complete Harpers Week Biography:
Arthur Sewall was a transportation tycoon who was selected as the Democratic vice-presidential nominee in 1896. He was born in Bath, Maine, the third son of Rachel Trufant Sewall and William Dunning Sewall; the latter having been financially successful as one of the town’s first shipbuilders and an investor in railroads and other business corporations. After an education in Bath’s common school, Arthur Sewall apprenticed in his father’s shipyard, learning each job, and was sent to Prince Edward’s Island for instruction in cutting ship timber. In 1854, he joined his older brother, Edward, to form E. & A. Sewall, which took over their father’s shipbuilding firm. Upon Edward’s death in 1879, the name was changed to Arthur Sewall & Co., and the business managed was by Arthur, as senior partner, with his second son, William, and a nephew, Samuel Sewall.
Arthur Sewall’s firm launched its first ship, the thousand-ton Holyhead, in January 1855 and built 80 ships over the next 50 years. During the Civil War, Sewall placed patriotism above business by rejecting the option of registering his ships with Britain so that they could more safely traverse the sea-lanes. As a result, his vessel, the Vigilant, was captured by the Sumter, the first Confederate blockade raider captained by Raphael Semmes. With renewed demand for ships in the mid-1870s, Sewall’s company constructed 10 innovatively designed vessels of superior quality. After weathering a depression in the shipbuilding trade during the 1880s, his shipyard produced four 3,000-ton ships in the early 1890s, including the Roanoke (1892), the largest wooden sailing ship built in the United States. Realizing that the days of wooden vessels were rapidly passing, Sewall revamped his shipyard, following a research tour in Britain, to produce steel ships. In 1894, his firm launched the first American-built, steel-hulled, square-rigger, the Dirigo, the name reflecting Maine’s state motto, “I lead.”
Sewall was also involved in other businesses, mainly in the transportation sector. He was director and for nine years (1884-1893) president of the Maine Central Railroad; president of the Eastern Railroad and the Boston and Maine Railroad at various times; a director of the Mexican Central Railroad and other lines; president of the Portland, Mount Desert, and Machias Steamboat Company (1884); and president of the Bath National Bank (1871-1900).
The only electoral offices Sewall ever held were those of city councilman and alderman in his hometown of Bath, Maine. However, he was a leader of the Democratic Party in Maine, served on the Democratic National Committee from 1888 until his death in 1900, and was a delegate at all the Democratic National Conventions from 1872 through 1900, except 1888 (which he did attend). In 1893, he was a candidate for the U.S. Senate, but lost the election in the Republican-dominated state legislature.
In 1895, Sewall announced that he favored “free silver,” the inflationary policy of unlimited coinage of silver as a plan to assist debt-ridden Americans (primarily, farmers). That stance had emerged as the majority view of Democrats, becoming the centerpiece of the party’s national platform in 1896. After delegates selected William Jennings Bryan as the Democratic standard-bearer, they turned to Sewall as the vice presidential nominee. Despite his lack of political experience, the shipbuilder’s age, reputation as a successful businessman, Eastern residence, and tariff protectionist sentiment balanced Jenning’s youth, image as a dangerous radical, Western residence, and tariff-for-revenue position. Democrats may also have hoped that Sewall would contribute some of his wealth (estimated at $5-6 million at the time) to the campaign. However, the Populist Party considered Sewall to be anti-labor, and so nominated a ticket headed by Bryan, but substituted Thomas E. Watson, a former Populist congressman from Georgia, as his running mate. Both Bryan and Sewall campaigned energetically, but lost the election by a substantial margin to the Republican ticket of William McKinley and Garret Hobart.
Emman Duncan Crooker Sewall |
In 1859, Sewall had married Emman Duncan Crooker; the couple had three sons. Their eldest, Harold, served as a diplomat in the Republican administrations of Benjamin Harrison and William McKinley, as a Maine state legislator, and as a delegate to the 1896 Republican National Convention. On September 5, 1900, Arthur Sewall died at his summer home at Small Point, Maine.
Sources consulted: American National Biography [Paolo E. Coletta]; Gilbert Fite, “Election of 1896,” in History of American Presidential Elections, ed. Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr., New York: Chelsea House Publishers, 1985; Harper’s Encyclopedia of United States History; Harper’s Weekly; The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography; Ships of the World: An Historical Encyclopedia Houghton-Mifflin online; and, 1896: The Presidential Campaign, Vassar College website.
Emma D Crocoker daughter of Charles Crooker and Rachel Sewall. Charles son of Jonathan Harding Crooker and Hannah Duncan Children of Arthur and Emma Sewall: Loyall Farragut Sewall (1894 - 1958) Arthur H. Sewall (1898 - 1962) Harold Marsh Sewall (1860 - 1924
From Article Bath Maine 400 Year Tradition of Shipbuilding
The Sewall Home Bath Maine From THE DOWNEAST DILETTANTE Tales & Opinions From Maine Regarding Architecture, Art, Books, Design, Landscape, & Occasional Whims
Mortuary Notice Friday, September 7, 1900 Kansas Semi-Weekly Capital (Topeka, KS)
Lieutenant Sumner Sewall, 94th Aero Squadron, 1918 |
Col Frederic Dummer Sewall (1825 - 1907) |
ARTHUR SEWALL: BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH.
Arthur Sewall, ship
builder, business man, and National Democratic candidate for
Vice-President of the United States, was born in Bath, Me., Nov. 25,
1835, third son of William Dunning and Rachel Trufant Sewall. His great-grandfather, Col. Dummer Sewall, came to Bath, Me., from York, also a district of Maine, in 1762, purchased the site of the present Sewall estate,
was an officer in the French and Indian war, and subsequently in the
war of the American Revolution. He was fifth in descent from Henry Sewall, who
was mayor of Coventry, England. Henry's grandson married Jane Dummer
and emigrated to America in 1634, settling at Newbury, Mass. Judge
Samuel Sewall of Salem, the first
Chief-Justice immortalized by Whittier as the "good and true," who was
made famous in the celebrated witchcraft trials of that town, and one of
the board of overseers of Harvard, was a son of this Sewall, and his brother, John Sewall, was
the direct ancestor of all the Sewalls of Maine. Arthur was educated in
the best schools of Bath, and at an early age apprenticed to his father
in the ship-building business. Here he passed the several grades of
progression, and became a thorough master of the business. His first
visit to the outside world was a voyage to Prince Edward's Island, where
he exchanged a cargo of merchandise for ship timber, to supply his
father's yards on the Kennebec. Upon his return, although scarcely
twenty years old, he, with his brother, Edward, purchased the business
of William D.
Sewall and Clark & Sewall, and, under the name of E. & A. Sewall, launched their first ship, the Holyhead, of over 1,000 tons burden. This was in 1855.
The Bath Sewalls have been closely identified with Bath's chief industry, ship building, since 1823, when William D. Sewall opened
the small shipyard on the banks of the Kennebec next to the family
homestead. He was succeeded in business by Clark & Sewall. These two earlier firms built twenty-nine wooden vessels between 1823 and 1854.
In 1859 Mr. Sewall was
married to Emma Duncan, daughter of Charles Crooker, an old-time
ship-builder and merchant. She was educated at Ipswich, Mass. She has
traveled extensively, is a thorough French linguist, an artist with pen
and camera, and a historical student. She is a woman of quiet and
refined tastes. They have two sons living, Harold Marsh and William
Dunning, and four grandchildren, Loyall Farragut, Arthur, Margaret and
Dorothy Sumner.
The firm of E. & A. Sewall was dissolved in 1879 by the death of Edward Sewall. This firm, in its twenty-four years of existence, had built forty-six wooden vessels. In 1879 Arthur Sewall, his son, William D. Sewall, and his nephew, Samuel S. Sewall, a son of the late Edward Sewall, formed the firm of Arthur Sewall & Co.
Arthur Sewall is
about the only man in the country who has persisted in building ships in
the face of what other builders have considered disaster. Before the
first administration of Mr. Cleveland grass grew in every wooden
shipbuilding yard on both coasts. But Mr. Sewall, believing
that a turn for the better soon would come, resumed building, and with
greater earnestness that ever before. There followed in quick succession
four monsters, each representing a sum beyond $125,000. These were the Rappahannock,
Shenandoah, Susquehanna, and Roanoke, all
wooden vessels, averaging about 3,000 tons net each, capable of
carrying easily a tonnage in cargo of half as much more. The Roanoke was the largest. This ship, built in 1892, measures 3,400 tons, and is now the largest wooden ship afloat. The Shenandoah measures 3,258, and the Susquehanna 2,629. All are magnificent vessels, and as a fleet are classed superior to any other similar fleet, in one control, in the world.
In the spring of 1893 Arthur Sewall, having
made a tour of all the noted shipyards of the world, to keep abreast of
the march of progress in marine construction, returned to Bath and
began the equipment of the firm's shipyard for the complete construction
of steel sailing vessels, and the first result of this equipment was
the launching of the noble steel ship appropriately call the Dirigo. This mammoth vessel, added to those mentioned, composed the largest fleet of sailing vessels in the United States. The Dirigo was
launched in 1894, and measures 2,856 tons. She was the first steel
sailing ship built in America. To show in what proportion the business
of the Sewall's has grown in comparison with the growth of other large
businesses of the country, it may be stated that the tonnage of the Indiana, launched in 1876, is 1,488, while that of the Roanoke, launched
seventeen years later, is 3,400, nearly twoand-a-half times as great.
In addition to his large fleet of square rigged "deep water" ships, Mr. Sewall has
constructed and manages a large fleet of three and four-masted
schooners, which are engaged in the coal, ice and lumber trade on the
Atlantic coast. One of these vessels, the Carrie A. Lane, a
three-masted schooner of less than 800 tons, was sent some years ago
around Cape Horn from New York to San Francisco. She was the first
vessel of anything like her kind or size to make this voyage.
Besides his extensive interests in shipping, Mr. Sewall is interested in railroads, the Bath Iron Works, which built the United States gunboats Castine and Machias and the ram Katahdin, and other enterprises. If Mr. Sewall could
have had his way, and had the conditions been favorable, he would have
devoted all his time to the building of ships. His capabilities as a man
of affairs have been the means of drafting him into other work. His
father had been a director on the Portland and Kennebec railroad, and
Arthur took his father's place. He has had extensive connection with
other roads, not only in Maine, but in Mexico and the Western States,
and he has been president of the Maine Central system. He is a man of
executive capacity, excellent business judgment and a good counsellor in
business enterprises, and it is perhaps due more to his possession of
these qualities than to the ownership of any very large amounts of stock
that he has been called to the corporate positions which he has filled.
Mr. Sewall is a Mason, and a member of
the Swedenborgian church. He belongs to no other society, secret or
otherwise. He is president of the Merchant's Marine Association, which
has been organized to restore American shipping by discriminating
duties.
He supported the
navigation laws with these arguments: "If for no other reason than
keeping our flag afloat, the present navigation laws merit the support
of every American citizen. Why, it seems to me that it ought to be worth
millions to us to have our flag carried around the world. From the
patriotic standpoint, aside from that of commercial expediency, I cannot
see how the thought of an American flag flying over anything that is
not American can fail to be offensive. No matter what kind of a bill is
passed by the friends of the so-called 'Free Ship laws,' owners will put
their ships under whichever flag
best suit their purposes, and so, in case of war, the advantages will be wholly on the side of the foreign owner."
During the greater part of Mr. Cleveland's first administration Mr. Sewall was
on terms of close intimacy with the President, and every appointment
which he recommended was made. But the free silver views of Mr. Sewall
had at that time caused him to be classed by many of his friends in the
East as a man who had gone wild on money questions. As a result of Mr.
Cleveland's opposition to silver, Mr. Sewall fought
against his renomination. He worked unceasingly for Cleveland's defeat
at Chicago, standing for David B. Hill to the end but then came into
line and helped elect the nominee. He never ceased to be an active
member of the party. He was the unanimous choice of his party in Maine
for United States Senator in 1892, and the attempt to turn him down at
the State Convention by a resolution denouncing his free silver views
failed.
Mr. Sewell was a delegate to the National
Democratic Convention at Baltimore in 1872; at Cincinnati in 1880 and
1884; at St. Louis in 1888; and at Chicago in 1892 and 1896. At Chicago
in July, 1896, he was one of the few advocates from New England of the
free and unlimited coinage of silver. He was selected by the convention
as their candidate for the office of Vice-president of the United
States, and in an interview at the time voiced his sentiments on the
platform as follows:
"There are thousands of
business men in the East who are turning away from the single gold
standard. It is not a class issue. In my opinion there is not a
legitimate business in this country but that would be benefited by the
restoration of silver to its rightful place in our national currency.
"I have been an advocate of silver ever since Congress
demonetized that metal in 1873. I held at the time that a mistake had been made, and have had no reason since to change my mind.
"There are two sides to
every question, and as an individual banker I have a perfect right to
take a position opposite to those who constitute the majority in the
banking business. As I said before, this is not a technical question nor
a class issue."
Upon his return to his home in Bath he received an
ovation from his fellow citizens long to be remembered by the staid
people of that maritime town. The mayor warmly welcomed the nominee, and
Mr. Sewall in the course of his reply to the warm welcome, said:
"It was a great convention, yet it did not seem to
me to be a partisan one. It seemed more like the uprising of the people,
and they seemed to be controlled by one idea, and that idea has filled
me for years. They knew that this country is in deep distress, that it
has been in distress for years, and that the great trouble is with our
monetary system; and they believe as I believe, that there is only one
remedy. They entertain no dishonest or dishonorable idea, but they
demand that we be carried back to the money of our fathers, to that
monetary system under which this government flourished for so many
years, and they believe that is the only road to prosperity."
"The keynote of the Chicago platform is found in
the Declaration of Independence. It simply implies that wherever the
Government comes in contact with the citizen, wherever the citizen
touches the Government, that all stand upon a common level, and there
shall be equal rights to all and special privileges to no one. "—William
J. Bryan.
San Francisco Call, Volume 80, Number 42, 12 July 1896 — ARTHUR SEWALL
Article from The Forecaster Newspaper 2006 Author launches book on Bath shipbuilding family
Thursday, April 16, 2009
BATH — While the Sewall family has been in the news recently after its fuel and convenience store company filed for bankruptcy, a new book looks at the family from a different perspective, telling the warts-and-all tale of its heyday as a builder and manager of a vast fleet of merchant ships.
The book by W.H. Bunting of Whitefield, "Live Yankees: The Sewalls and Their Ships," was published April 1. While the title may signify a history of ships, Bunting said last week,
"to a large extent (the book) is about people. ... It is largely
composed of captains' letters, and the records are 315 feet long."
He was approached by Abbie Sewall, a descendant of the family, to write the book.
"She thought it was time to have someone take another look at the Sewall papers," he said. "It was a strong belief that this should not be a vanity book. ... (Abbie) just believes in the truth."
The Sewalls gave money to the Maine Maritime Museum in Bath – co-publishers of the book with Tilbury House – and the museum in turn hired Bunting to write it.
"I was very fortunate to be asked to do it," he said.
"Live Yankees" is essentially a series of short stories that tie together to create a larger story, Bunting explained.
"When they began, (the Sewalls) were one of several ... family-owned fleets in Bath," the author said. "They were among the bigger shipbuilders and shipowners."
The shipbuilding story dates back to the 1820s, and the first of the family to build ships was William D. Sewall.
"He joined up with a fellow named Clark, and they ran a store," Bunting said. "In those days, stores were very important because they really were the place where people brought in produce and then exchanged it for West Indian produce. So stores very often got into shipping. A number of the Bath fleets were started from stores ... because the store keeper, instead of trying to pay a ship, he decided he wanted to have one built for him."
Eventually the shipbuilding business became prosperous enough that it replaced the store. Two of Sewall's sons, Edward and Arthur, started E&A Sewall in 1854, which took over from Clark & Sewall. That partnership dissolved in 1879, causing the company name to change to Arthur Sewall & Co. Included in that new partnership were Arthur Sewall's son Will and Edward Sewall's son Sam.
One of Edward Sewall's sons, Mark, is the namesake for the M.W. Sewall Co., which started serving Mid-Coast communities in 1887.
Arthur Sewall is a key figure in the book. He was William Jennings Bryan's running mate on the Democratic ticket in the 1896 presidential election.
"It was a very bizarre match-up," Bunting said. "(Sewall) being a capitalist, and a banker, and a railroad president as well as a shipbuilder. And of course Bryan was a man of the people. There's no guarantee that Bryan would have won if Sewall hadn't been his candidate, but having Sewall as his running mate really guaranteed he could not have won. It's an interesting footnote in American history."
After Sewall's death in 1900, his younger partners carried on, although the years to follow saw a period of decline. They sold the business around the time of World War I, ending nearly a century of building and managing a fleet of more than 100 merchant ships.
That fleet included mostly stout, deep-water square-riggers that carried out trade around the world, Bunting explained. The records Bunting sifted through doing his research – such as reports from Sewall ship captains – paint portraits of shipwrecks, plagues, mutinies, "cannibal isles" and other intriguing elements of seafaring life.
The company's most prosperous era occurred before the Civil War. During that time cotton was the Sewalls' major trade. After the war, guano – bird and bat excrement used as fertilizer – became a prime product. California grain and case oil were among trades that followed.
In spotlighting the success that the Sewall's business once attained, Bunting also casts light on the more unflattering aspects of the business' architects. "They were notorious for being 'cheese-parers' – skinflints," he said. "And they were just interested in every single penny. Their ships were well-supplied with sails and things, but there was nothing extra. That was right through their whole history, and they were just known as very – 'parsimonious' would be a kind word."
Bunting's love of ships and history is telling in pictures on the walls of his house and in the themes of his books. "Portrait of a Port: Boston 1852-1914," "Steamers, Schooners, Cutters, and Sloops," "Sea Struck," and the two-volume "A Day's Work: A Sampler of Historic Maine Photographs, 1860-1920," are among the books he has written.
He was approached by Abbie Sewall, a descendant of the family, to write the book.
"She thought it was time to have someone take another look at the Sewall papers," he said. "It was a strong belief that this should not be a vanity book. ... (Abbie) just believes in the truth."
The Sewalls gave money to the Maine Maritime Museum in Bath – co-publishers of the book with Tilbury House – and the museum in turn hired Bunting to write it.
"I was very fortunate to be asked to do it," he said.
"Live Yankees" is essentially a series of short stories that tie together to create a larger story, Bunting explained.
"When they began, (the Sewalls) were one of several ... family-owned fleets in Bath," the author said. "They were among the bigger shipbuilders and shipowners."
The shipbuilding story dates back to the 1820s, and the first of the family to build ships was William D. Sewall.
"He joined up with a fellow named Clark, and they ran a store," Bunting said. "In those days, stores were very important because they really were the place where people brought in produce and then exchanged it for West Indian produce. So stores very often got into shipping. A number of the Bath fleets were started from stores ... because the store keeper, instead of trying to pay a ship, he decided he wanted to have one built for him."
Eventually the shipbuilding business became prosperous enough that it replaced the store. Two of Sewall's sons, Edward and Arthur, started E&A Sewall in 1854, which took over from Clark & Sewall. That partnership dissolved in 1879, causing the company name to change to Arthur Sewall & Co. Included in that new partnership were Arthur Sewall's son Will and Edward Sewall's son Sam.
One of Edward Sewall's sons, Mark, is the namesake for the M.W. Sewall Co., which started serving Mid-Coast communities in 1887.
Arthur Sewall is a key figure in the book. He was William Jennings Bryan's running mate on the Democratic ticket in the 1896 presidential election.
"It was a very bizarre match-up," Bunting said. "(Sewall) being a capitalist, and a banker, and a railroad president as well as a shipbuilder. And of course Bryan was a man of the people. There's no guarantee that Bryan would have won if Sewall hadn't been his candidate, but having Sewall as his running mate really guaranteed he could not have won. It's an interesting footnote in American history."
After Sewall's death in 1900, his younger partners carried on, although the years to follow saw a period of decline. They sold the business around the time of World War I, ending nearly a century of building and managing a fleet of more than 100 merchant ships.
That fleet included mostly stout, deep-water square-riggers that carried out trade around the world, Bunting explained. The records Bunting sifted through doing his research – such as reports from Sewall ship captains – paint portraits of shipwrecks, plagues, mutinies, "cannibal isles" and other intriguing elements of seafaring life.
The company's most prosperous era occurred before the Civil War. During that time cotton was the Sewalls' major trade. After the war, guano – bird and bat excrement used as fertilizer – became a prime product. California grain and case oil were among trades that followed.
In spotlighting the success that the Sewall's business once attained, Bunting also casts light on the more unflattering aspects of the business' architects. "They were notorious for being 'cheese-parers' – skinflints," he said. "And they were just interested in every single penny. Their ships were well-supplied with sails and things, but there was nothing extra. That was right through their whole history, and they were just known as very – 'parsimonious' would be a kind word."
Bunting's love of ships and history is telling in pictures on the walls of his house and in the themes of his books. "Portrait of a Port: Boston 1852-1914," "Steamers, Schooners, Cutters, and Sloops," "Sea Struck," and the two-volume "A Day's Work: A Sampler of Historic Maine Photographs, 1860-1920," are among the books he has written.
Alex Lear can be reached at 373-9060 ext. 113 or alear@theforecaster.net.
2 comments:
I am a Sewall from Maine so thanks for the information
I am a Sewall living in Calif. My father was Edward E. Sewall of Brockton, Mass. This is great info -- thanks so much to those who put it all together. I've purchased the book Live Yankees; looking forward to delving further into my ancestry.
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