
John RoweJohn Rowe was a patriot and merchant. He is best known for the
wharf in Boston that
bears his name, but he was also the person that gave the Commonwealth of Massachusetts its
Sacred Cod. The following is a
biography quoted from History Of The Emblem Of The Codfish compiled by a committee of the Massachusetts House of
Representatives (1895):
"Mr. Rowe was a man of peculiar public spirit and
patriotism, and it is probable that he paid for the carving of the fish and all
the expenses incident thereto, even those connected with its 'hanging up in
the room where the House sit,' out of his own pocket.
It seems proper that something more than a mere reference should be made
to the person to whose fore-thought and patriotism we owe the placing in our
halls of legislation of so significant a reminder of an industry once the
greatest in Massachusetts. It has been said of him he was 'as true a friend
to his country as any whose names have reached a greater renown.' John, son
of Joseph and Mary Rowe, was born at Exeter, Devon, England, on Nov. 16,
1715.
The date of his departure from England is as unknown as that of his
advent in Boston. That it was in his early youth is evident, for it is known
that in 1740 he was made a member of St. John's Lodge of Freemasons, the
first body of that fraternity to be established in Boston, and the records
show that he was then twenty- five years of age. That he took a deep and
lasting interest in Masonry is shown by the fact that he was elected master
of the lodge nine years later,. being the fifth Provincial Grand Master of
Masons in the year 1768. He held the office until his death. He made
numerous investments in and about Boston, where he became the owner of
considerable property, including the present Rowe's wharf, a residence on
Pond, now Bedford, Street, and an estate in Milton. Chauncy Street for many
years bore his name.
From the very beginning John Rowe was an active and earnest participant
in the struggle of the colonists to free themselves from the tyrannies of
the mother country. He was one of the fifty most prominent and influential
merchants and business men of Boston who, on Dec. 19, 1760, signed a
petition to the General Court charging the officers of the Crown with
appropriating to their own use money belonging to the Province. All through
the agitation aroused by the odious stamp acts he was an indefatigable
worker for the repeal of those iniquitous laws. So active was he in this
direction that one historian has credited him with leading the mob against
the house of Lieutenant Governor Hutchinson during the riots of 1765, caused
by the enforcement of the stamp acts; although in justice to John Rowe it
should be said that Hutchinson himself, in his account of this riot, states
that the mob was led by one Mackintosh. John Rowe enjoyed in the highest
degree the confidence and esteem of his fellow citizens, and was repeatedly
appointed on committees in town meetings.
In 1764 he was so appointed one of a committee of five to inform the Rev.
Mr. George Whitefield of a unanimous vote' of thanks for the great service
rendered by the reverend gentleman in raising money to relieve the distress
occasioned by the disastrous fire of 1760, which caused so much suffering to
the people of Boston. If not a leader and moving spirit among the Sons of
Liberty, he was at least in close sympathy with them and their aims, for on
May 6, 1766, that organization controlled the election of the
Representatives to the General Court from Boston, and chose
James Otis,
Thomas Cushing,
Samuel Adams,
John Hancock and John Rowe, the
latter being selected upon the motion of Samuel Adams; and the distinguished
company in which he found himself was of itself ample evidence of his
ability and standing in the community. Nor was this the only public office
held by him, for on March 14 of the following year we find him elected one
of the selectmen, having for colleagues John Hancock, Samuel Sewall, William
Phillips and others but little less renowned. He held this office until
1769, when he declined a re-election, and the board thereupon unanimously
extended him a vote of thanks for his past services, At this time he was
also one of the fire wards of the town.
Although now past middle age, his interest in public questions was as
keen as ever, and his patriotism as ardent as in the days of the stamp act
excitement; and four years later, in 1773, at the age of fifty-eight, we
find him, in conjunction with Samuel Adams and Hancock, a leading spirit in
the stirring scenes that led up to the famous
Boston Tea Party. It is claimed
he was part owner in one of the vessels which brought to Boston the tea
thrown into the harbor on the evening of Thursday, December 16; and from
certain passages in his journal, covering the period from September, 1764,
to July, 1779, it would seem the vessel was the 'Eleanor,' Captain Bruce. An
entry in this journal, 'I would Rather have Lost five hundred Guineas than
Captain Bruce should have taken any of this Tea on board his Ship,'
indicates his annoyance that his vessel should have been implicated in this
obnoxious proceeding; but self-interest did not deter him from doing all in
his power to prevent the landing of the tea.
The afternoon of Dec. 16, 1773, saw the
Old South Church packed as it
never had been before. At three o'clock it was estimated there were seven
thousand people in and around the edifice. Samuel Adams, John Rowe, Young,
Quincy and other distinguished citizens were upon the platform, exhorting
the people to stand firm, and cautioning them to moderation. In the course
of his address Rowe said, ""Who knows how tea will mingle with salt water?"
? a suggestion which was received with loud applause, and has been thought
by many to be a foreshadowing of what was to take place if permission was
not given the vessels to sail without landing their obnoxious cargo. Rowe
and Hancock have been accredited with taking part in throwing the tea
overboard; but it is almost certain the former had no actual hand in so
doing, for he was still upon the platform when, a little after six o'clock,
the Mohawks rushed by the church on their way to Griffin's
wharf, where the ships were moored.
In 1743 John Rowe married Hannah Speakman in Boston. He was of a deeply
religious turn of mind, and for many years was a member of the old Trinity
Church, of which he was a warden from 1769 until 1777, and upon his death,
Feb. 21,1787, he was buried under the church."
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