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Title Miscellaneous Shipping Papers
Reference MSS-43, box 2, folder 11
Library Phillips Library, Peabody Essex Museum
Collection Nathaniel Kinsman Papers, 1784-1882
Collection Series Business Papers
Date n.d.
Description Various papers, including lists of cargos, imports and exports, prices and wages for the crew, including deductions for costs incurred in the course of the voyage. It is not always clear which ships or voyages these papers relate to.
Document Type Ephemera, Shipping Papers, Business Records
Theme(s) Trade and Commerce
Keywords prices, purchases, sales, accounts, shellac, spices, ginger, dye, skins, imports, importation, exports, copper, lead, saltpetre, charges, debt, investment, sugar, health, instructions, ivory, coffee, money, pepper, cloth, silk, cargo, calculations, tea, crew, fees, clothing, bill, wages, storage, stores, weight, drugs, indigo, tax, customs, invoice, sugar, repairs, skins, foregin, language
Countries USA; Indonesia; China; India; Russia; UK; Netherlands; Denmark; Cuba
Ports Jakarta, Indonesia; London, UK; Salem, USA; Kolkata, India; Guangzhou, China; St Petersburg, Russia; Amsterdam, Netherlands; Copenhagen, Denmark; Havana, Cuba
Company Shillaber and Company; Baring Brothers
People Nathaniel Kinsman
Additional Information

Nathaniel Kinsman (1798-1847) was the eldest son of Nathaniel (1775-1808) and Deborah (Webb) Kinsman. He served as a clerk on the Union, advancing to supercargo in two years, after which he continued to sail ships for William Gray and Pickering Dodge. By 1830, Nathaniel was part-owner and master of the Parachute. Between 1834 and 1839 he stayed in Salem, Massachusetts, and married Rebecca Chase (1810-1882) with whom he had four children. In 1839, Nathaniel returned to the sea as master of the Zenobia, owned by Daniel Parker of New York. After a venture to ship tea from Canton to New York failed to make a large profit, Nathaniel accepted the offer of a partnership with Wetmore and Company. He left Salem for China in June 1843 with his wife, two children, a niece and a servant. Once his family were settled in Macao, Nathaniel left for Canton to establish a new house for the firm. His wife remained in Macao, serving as a secretary and as the official business hostess for Wetmore and Company. The family lived in China for three and a half years. Nathaniel died in Macao on 30 April 1847. Rebecca returned to Salem in June 1847. In 1865 she married Joseph Grinnell of New Bedford.

Please note that some of the metadata for this document has been drawn from the Peabody Essex Museum catalogue.

Copyright Phillips Library, Peabody Essex Museum