Sketch of the Early life of [Lucretia Mott] written out by Thomas Cornell*, from notes taken while talking with his Aunts, in the autumn of 1879 [sideways along left margin] * A nephew of James Mott 1 Lucretia Coffin was born on Nantucket, Jan 3, 1793, and represented the oldest families of the Island. Both her parents were of the [Society of Friends]. Her father, as well as her uncle, her mother's brother, Mayhew Folger, commanded ships in the China trade Nantucket was in those days one of the most prosperous commercial centers of America, and the Coffins, & the Folgers, & the Mayhews were among its leading citizens, as well as its earliest settlers. Thomas Mayhew was the first European owner of Nantucket, under a patent dated Oct 13, 1641, and in 1659 he granted interests in the Island to nine others, including Tristram & Peter Coffin, [Thomas Macy] Christopher Stusseye, & others allied them or afterwards to the Coffin Family. Benjamin Franklin's mother was also a cousin of the Nantucket Folgers, & he and Lucretia Coffin were on their mother's side of a common stock. Of her early life she related in her 87th year, that her mother kept a store in the front room of their dwelling house, still standing in the principle street of Nantucket, where she sold East India & English goods, making her own purchases & sales. For her Father was often absent for long periods, having followed the sea from his youth, and having married only when he obtained the command 2 [crossed out] [command] of his first vessel in his 23rd year. In 1800 when she was 7 years old he sailed from Wood's Hole, (For Nantucket harbors had not depth of water for large vessels) in the ship, Trial, for China. In the straits of Magellan he bought a lot of seal skins, & shipped them in care of a friend who was [captain] of another vessel. Subsequently the Trial was seized in the Pacific by the Spaniards for alleged violation of neutrality, & although Capt. Coffin defended himself in the Spanish courts of S.A. [South America], & obtained decisions in his favor, he never regained his vessel. While the controversy was pending, he made his home with a Spanish family of Valparaíso, and learned so much of the language & of the religion of the country, that after his return he always encouraged the study of Spanish & spoke well of the Catholic Church. He finally crossed S.A. to Buenos Ayres [Buenos Aires], and came home by another ship in 1803, having been absent 32 months. (The seal skins sent to Canton, made good returns in silks, nankeens, china, tea, &c, so that it was a profitable voyage.) [/crossed out] After this experience Capt. Coffin abandoned the sea, & in 1804 removed to Boston, & went into business there, & prospered. When his friend returned 3 [crossed out] and accounted for the seal skins shipped from the straits of Magellan, the profits on them were so large, that it made the voyage of the Trial a successful one to Capt. Coffin, although the ship itself was confiscated by the Spaniards. [/crossed out] Meantime his daughter Lucretia had been at school on the Island & also in Boston, & in 1806, when 14 years old was sent to [crossed out: Boston] Nine Partners. While she was there, in 1807, her uncle Capt. Mayhew Folger sailed for China in the ship Topaz, for Boardman & Pope of Boston, he being himself part owner. [crossed out] For the Captains of Nantucket were usually part owners in the ships they sailed and were their own super-cangos. On the return voyage in the Pacific, Capt. Folger found himself near an island, now known as Pitcairn's Island, and being in want of water, sought out the Island & discovered there the mutineers of the ship, Bounty, where they had been unmolested for 19 years. Soon afterwards, at Juan Fernandez, his own ship was seized by the Spaniards for alleged violation of neutrality, & taken to Valparaíso, where he saw lying at the wharf, the ship Trial, which 7 years before had been taken from his brother-in-law, Capt. Coffin. But [/crossed out] 4 more fortunate than he, Capt. Folger recovered $44.000 in the Spanish courts, and returned with his ship to Boston in 1808, bringing the news of his own success. Lucretia Coffin remained at Nine Partners 3 years, or until 1809, the latter part of the time assisting in teaching. In now telling of those early days, she says the school was not rich, & paid its teachers small salaries, perhaps $100 per year, or so, in addition to their board. There were 3 female teachers & 2 male teachers, one of whom at this time was James Mott. In 1807 her father presented the school with a map of the U. States, which she believes to have been the first map in the school, although a pair of globes had been previously [crossed out: presented] provided. Like many other school girls she thought when a pupil that the discipline was sometimes unmeasurably strict, and she relates that when one of the boys, her cousin, was confined in a dark closet on bread & water, she conspired with her sister to give him bread and butter, under the door.* The boys & girls were not permitted to meet, except that relatives might speak over a certain fence on certain days. The desire for further culture was not wanting among [crossed out] * She also tells of a favorite amusement among the girls at that school, which was to "play meeting." On one occasion they hold a "meeting for business," and had a case before them of violation of the discipline. Lucretia and another girl were appointed to visit the offender and report to the meeting. This they did, and Lucretia remembered reporting as follows. "Friends, we have visited Tabitha Field, and labored with her, and we think, we mellowed her some." [/crossed out] 5 the teachers, for she says that while she was teaching there, they formed a class among themselves & took lessons in French for 6 weeks, & she says she feels the benefit of those lessons to day, in her ability to understand many French words as they occur in ordinary reading. She relates that while at this school, the visiting [committee] occasionally looked after them, Elias Hicks being sometimes one of them, and on one occasion in 1809, overhearing a recitation of some of the girls, in which the height of Chimborazo came in question, he said he did not want the girls to waste their time in such matters as the height of mountains, but rather to learn such things as might fit them for their work in life. She characterizes Elias Hicks in those days as "a very narrow man, but an eloquent preacher, and one who always drew large crowds to hear him" While Lucretia Coffin was at Nine Partners, Thomas & George Odiowe were doing a prosperous business in cut nails, then a new thing in the world, and desiring to extend the business, they induced Capt. Coffin, in 1809, to remove to [Philadelphia] to take charge of it there. He established a commission business, of which the selling 6 of the nails was an important part. The nails were made at a factory at French Creek, about 20 miles from [Philadelphia]. The business at first prospered, but in the troubled times which followed, resulted in large losses. [Thomas Coffin] came to [Philadelphia] with $20.000. Of this he saved but little, and was obliged to seek other business. About 1812 he & his wife & some others made a horseback journey from Lancaster, in [Pennsylvania] to near the present site of Massillon, Ohio, and Thomas Roche, one of the number, settled there. But [Thomas Coffin] returned to [Philadelphia] & continued the commission business till he died there, in 1815. Lucretia left Nine Partners in 1809 to go to [Philadelphia] and James Mott left soon after, and early in 1810 entered as a clerk the store of [Thomas Coffin], & boarded with a plain friend nearby. In 1811, they were married he being not quite 23 years of age, & she just past 18. They made their home at her father's house until the following Oct. when they hired a house in Union St bel. 2nd at $325 a year and went to house-keeping. Here their first child, Anna, was born in 1812. James Mott remained with his father-in-law 7 [father-in-law], first as clerk, & afterwards as a partner, until the old business had been given up. But he was looking out for new business. It was thought at one time that there might be an opening for him in the cotton mill of his uncle Richard Mott at Mamaroneck, & in this expectation he & his wife [crossed out: went] moved there early in 1814*. But there [crossed out: was] proved to be difficulties in the way. On the Failure of this attempt they returned to [Philadelphia] & James got employment in a wholesale plow store, at a salary of $600. The following year [Thomas Coffin] died (1815) & then James Mott undertook his business of commission merchant. This business seems also to have been unsatisfactory, for he was subsequently in N.Y. employed in Jacob Barker's bank. After 6 [months] he returned to [Philadelphia] and was employed by John Sarge, who did an extensive business in dry goods, & agreed to pay him $600 a year, his salary was soon raised to $800, then to $1000, then to $1200, each time making the increase date back from the beginning. Subsequently Sarge failed, & James Mott, with one of the other clerks began a new business in Cotton goods. * A son, Thomas was born here. He died the winter of 1818, a great grief, a promising boy. "You'll never have another like him." This led to her preaching. 8 This was not satisfactory, and he afterwards became unwilling as a matter of conscience to deal in the products of slave labor, and gave up cotton altogether. This was about the year 1823. At this time he had acquired the necessary capital and went into business in woollen goods and carried it on for many years, with occasional heavy losses, especially in 1837. He took his son Thomas into partnership in 1840. He ultimately accumulated a moderate competency & retired from business in 1852. In the year 1817, Lucretia Mott took charge of a school in [Philadelphia], and in the following year began to preach, being then 25 years old. She travelled as a minister in [Pennsylvania], [Maryland], [Virginia], and in New England. She always took decided ground against intemperance, & especially against slavery, & took an active part in the organization of the [American Anti Slavery Society], in 1833. In the separation in the [Society of Friends] in 1827, she and her husband had sided with the Hicksites 9 She was a delegate to the World's Anti Slavery Convention in London in 1840, but was not admitted because she was a woman. On returning she took an active part in advocating equal political rights for men and women, and was prominent in the first woman's rights convention held at Seneca Falls, in 1848. James Mott was chairman of the convention.