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Title Correspondence and accounts, with mention of David Cobb leaving Gouldsboro
Archival Reference Ms. N-1000
Sub-collection David Cobb Papers  
Author Cobb, Thomas  Cobb, David George Washington  
Date 19 Jan-11 Aug 1821
Document Type Correspondence; Business and financial document
Contents Includes:
Receipted bill from Edward L. Leighton to David Cobb for taxes owed on land in Gouldsboro belonging to the estate of William Bingham, [1821]
Letter from Thomas Dennie and Son (Boston) to David Cobb enclosing a bill for liquor, 19 Jan. 1821
Letter from Thomas Cobb (Bangor, Me.) to his father David Cobb concerning personal matters and urging him to leave Gouldsboro, 1 Mar. 1821
Letter from [George Washington] Cobb (Taunton) to his father David Cobb about family matters and local news at Taunton, 17 Apr. 1821, continued 11 July 1821
Letter from Samuel S. Wilde (Newburyport) to David Cobb concerning family and personal matters and inviting Cobb to live with the Wilde family, 19 Apr. 1821
Letter from Thomas Cobb (Bangor, Me.) to his father David Cobb informing him that Thomas Cobb will help him move, 19 May 1821
Bill from Peters and Pond to David Cobb for sundry items, 18 July 1821
Receipted bill from Thomas Hill [Gouldsboro, Me.] to David Cobb for postage due, 11 Aug. 1821
Letter from S[amuel] S. Wilde (Newburyport) to David Cobb informing him that Wilde's daughter Emmons has died, 30 Nov. 1821
Sub-collection Information This collection consists of the papers of David Cobb primarily documenting his position as land agent for William Bingham in Maine, including papers related to the settlement of Maine, logging and the lumber trade, roads, and other subjects. Also included are papers related to his service during the American Revolution and his career as a politician and judge.

David Cobb was a Revolutionary War soldier and aide-de-camp to General George Washington, speaker of the Massachusetts House of Representatives and president of the Senate, physician, judge, member of Congress, lieutenant governor of Massachusetts, and a founder of the Society of the Cincinnati and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.

The collection contains letters to Charles W. Hare, Bingham's Philadelphia agent, and Alexander Baring, the future Lord Ashburton and representative of London's House of Baring. Also included are legal actions, financial accounts, maps, and inventories related to land development, fishing, lumbering, census reports, lotteries, the laying out of streets, and the construction of wharves, warehouses, and sawmills in Gouldsboro, Maine, which Cobb tried to develop as a major commercial port.

The collection also contains eight fragmentary diaries kept by Cobb, 1781-1818; a manuscript notebook with sketches; lists of British ships of the line; instructions for naval officers; letters to various members of the Cobb family; and letters from William Eustis, Henry Knox, Timothy Pickering, and Israel Thorndike concerning foreign relations, state politics, and miscellaneous financial matters related to the firm of Cobb and Richards, in which Cobb was partner.
Region American East  
Subjects Taxation  Children and Family  Migration  Stores and Supplies  Alcohol  Commerce and Trade  
Places Bangor; Maine; Massachusetts; Gouldsboro; Taunton; Newburyport
People Cobb, David (1748-1830)  Cobb, Thomas (1772-1849)  Wilde, Samuel S. (fl. 1795-1824)  Cobb, David George Washington (1790-1832)  
Themes Business, Trade & Commerce; Children & Family
Library Massachusetts Historical Society  
Copyright Massachusetts Historical Society