Contents


Collection Overview

Administrative Information

Scope and Contents of the Collection

Search Terms

Amos Parker Accounts, 1827-1863

Finding Aid

Finding aid prepared by Ken Fones-Wolf.

Encoding funded by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.

2002

Collection Overview

Creator: Parker, Amos
Title: Amos Parker Accounts
Dates: 1827-1863
Abstract: Owner of a general store in Groveland, Massachusetts. Accounts include goods for sale (such as lumber and hardware) and the methods and form of payment (principally cash but also in exchange for labor or commodities like butter or eggs). Also documents Parker's role in the burgeoning shoe industry exchanging and receiving shipments of shoes, and supplying local shoemakers with tools.
Extent: 1 volume(0.25 linear ft.)
Language: English.
Identification: MS 211

Administrative Information

Acquired from Charles Apfelbaum, 1987.

Processed by Ken Fones-Wolf, September 1988.

Preferred Citation

Cite as: Amos Parker Accounts (MS 211). Special Collections and University Archives, W.E.B. Du Bois Library, University of Massachusetts Amherst.

The collection is open for research.

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Scope and Contents of the Collection

This account book documents the changing merchant activities of Amos Parker of Groveland in Essex County, Massachusetts. The first two-thirds of the account ledger covers the years 1827 to 1835, when the business appears to have been of a general store. Parker (born in 1792) sold a wide variety of goods, principally for cash but also in exchange for labor or some commodities like butter or eggs. In the early 1830s, Parker also began to specialize somewhat in the sale of lumber and hardware, primarily as a commission agent for Aaron P. Emerson Co. of Orland, Maine (first entry, p. 137).

The last third of the ledger demonstrates the growing importance of the burgeoning shoe industry in the local economy. Essex County was the center of the nation's shoe production and merchants played a prominent role. Parker began to accept shoes in return for credit at his store in the early 1830s, but by mid-decade he was more heavily involved in exchanging and receiving shipments of shoes (see the entries from Stickney & Balch, p. 227, and Manly Hardy, p. 228). His responses to the needs of local shoemakers are reflected in the large shipments of awls he ordered from Charles Lincoln between 1842 and 1850 (p. 260), and his immersion in the shoe industry is reflected in his later dealings with the Aaron P. Emerson Co., when he exchanged large shipments of shoes for the lumber he sold (pp. 235-236). Although Parker never became a shoe industry merchant capitalist, the industry impacted heavily on his operation.

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Search Terms

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