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Robert Oliver papers

 Collection
Identifier: MS 0626

Abstract

The Robert Oliver papers contains incoming letters from business associates and friends, 1789-1835.

Dates

  • 1789-1835

Conditions Governing Access

This collection is open to the public without restrictions.

Conditions Governing Use

The reproduction of materials in this collection may be subject to copyright restrictions. It is the responsibility of the researcher to determine and satisfy copyright clearances or other case restrictions when publishing or otherwise distributing materials found in the collections. For more information visit the MCHC’s Rights and Permissions page.

Extent

0.83 Linear Feet : 2 full Hollinger boxes

Language of Materials

English

Related Materials

MS 626.1, Robert Oliver record books, 1785-1835

MS 626.2, Robert Oliver Estate papers, 1759-1870

Provenance

The papers that comprise the three collections in the Oliver Papers came to the Maryland Historical Society at various times.

The first part of the collection received was the record books of Robert Oliver's

mercantile firms. These were given by H. Oliver Thompson in June 1934 (no accession number) and are now MS 626.1 Mr. Thompson may also have been the donor of the material on Meta [Oliver] Thompson and her father-in-law Henry A. Thompson that is now part of MS. 626.2.

Washington Perine gave the Society the papers of his grandfather David M. Perine in 1944 (accession number 49629). The Perine papers included the printed copies of the Mexican claims cases of Robert Oliver's Estate and the papers of Charles Oliver's and R.M. Gibbes' estates. These papers are now part of 626.2.

The bulk of the Oliver papers came to the Society in October 1944 as the gift of Robert Oliver's great-great-granddaughter Mary Josephs Fowler. The Robert Oliver letters that are now MS. 626 and the bulk of the Oliver Family Estate Papers now 626.2 were part of Mrs. Fowler's gift. A group of Robert Oliver's cancelled checks (1833-1834, Bank of the United States) were purchased at auction in 1957 (accession number 55644).

To pursue her own research Mrs. Fowler removed some of the papers concerning her great-great-grandfather Robert Oliver and her great-grandmother Margaret O. Colt that she had given in 1944. When these papers were returned in 1972, they were assigned a new accession number 64574 and given a new manuscript number MS. 1940. This material has been re-placed into the Robert Oliver Papers MS. 626 and the Oliver Family Estate Papers MS. 626.2.

Scope and Contents

This is an artificial collection of Robert Oliver's business and personal papers. Some appear to have been collected for the administration of his estate and others retained for their research value. The papers are largely in-coming letters with some copies of replies and some financial and legal papers. There are about 400 items which span the years 1789 to 1835.

The papers fall roughly into three categories: business, national politics and foreign affairs, and personal finance. Up until 1810, when Oliver curtailed his mercantile activities, the papers deal with his foreign trade. The letters are mainly from Oliver's London banker Baring Brothers and Co. and an associate in the Vera Cruz trade David Parish. Along with financial topics these letters deal with Oliver's claim against Great Britain for the capture (1806, 1807) of three of his ships. The letters also mention the difficulties imposed on merchants by the Embargo (December 1807-February 1809) and the Non-Intercourse Act which followed.

Oliver was a Federalist. As relations worsened with Great Britain, his Federalist friends wrote him letters critical of the U.S. administration and predicted war. Among the most detailed were two letters (1812, 1813) from former Secretary of the Navy and staunch Federalist Benjamin Stoddert. There are also letters (1812) from James McHenry and Nicholas Biddle. V. Moreau wrote apprising Oliver of Napoleon's activities in Spain (1809) and in Russia (1812) and of the possibilities of the U.S. entering the European hostilities. Oliver was a financial supporter of Federalist newspapers, and there are letters soliciting financial aid: J.E. Hall (1814, 1815) of the Law Journal and Chronicle and the Portfolio (Philadelphia); William Magruder (1816) for a federalist newspaper in Cumberland, Maryland; and Frederick G. Schaeffer,

Jr. (1821) of the Federal Republican. Oliver also received letters (1819-1825) from Robert H. Goldsborough, founder of the Easton (Md.) Gazette, about the state of Federalism in Maryland.

Oliver received letters from various U.S. consular officials relating to the state of affairs in the countries in which they were stationed. The most frequent of Oliver's correspondents was Christopher Hughes (1786-1849) who was in the foreign service for 30 years in Stockholm and the Netherlands. Hughes' lengthy letters (1818-1834) detail European affairs. Oliver also received several letters (1816-1818) from William Pinkney who mentioned his mission to Naples (1816) and Russia (1817-1818). Other consular correspondents were Alexander Hammett (Naples, 1825-1829) and William Stirling (Barcelona, 1826-1827).

Letters from relatives and friends, including Richard Caton and Michael Hogan, concerning financial matters are scattered throughout this collection of letters. Other material pertaining to Robert Oliver's family financial settlements are found among his estate papers (MS. 626.2). These family letters begin before Robert Oliver's death but because the financial matters discussed in the letters were not settled until after his death, the material is filed with his estate papers.

Other correspondents include Paul Bentalou, Robert Goodloe Harper, John Hoffman, Benjamin Chew Howard, Thomas Law, William Lorman, John Mercer, James Orr, Edward C. Pinkney, Joel R. Poinsett, J.W. Pomeroy, John Randolph of Roanoke, John S. Skinner, Roger B. Taney, L.W. Tazewell, Hugh Thompson, T. Tilghman, Charles B. Vaughn, John Campbell White, and William Wirt.

Title
Guide to the Robert Oliver papers
Status
Under Revision
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
Undetermined
Script of description
Code for undetermined script
Language of description note
English

Revision Statements

  • 2019-08-15: Manually entered into ArchivesSpace by Mallory Herberger.

Repository Details

Part of the H. Furlong Baldwin Library Repository

Contact:
H. Furlong Baldwin Library
Maryland Center for History and Culture
610 Park Avenue
Baltimore MD 21201 United States
4106853750