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John Jay Smith papers

 Collection
Identifier: HC.MC-900

Scope and Contents

The collection includes miscellaneous papers comprised of:

  • James Dickinson's testimony concerning Thomas Lloyd, 1694 (fragments conserved to paper base);
  • Document by Henry Mallows, 1699;
  • Letter from Mary Lucas to Benjamin Franklin, 1746;
  • Letter from Richard Smith Jr. to John Smith, 1747;
  • Document re appointment of William Simpson Chief Justice of SC, 1761;
  • Epistle from Meeting for Sufferings, London, to Gov. of New Jersey, Josiah Hardy, ca. 1761-62, requesting fair treatment of Quakers in NJ;
  • Letter from Nicholas Collin to William Attmore, 1773;
  • 2 Letters by C.S. Tarples to John Jay Smith, 1837-1838; 2 Letters from Frank M. Etting to John Jay Smith, 1859 & n.d.;
  • lines of prose by a patriot, ending “Long live the United States,” 1779;
  • Robert Proud's manuscript signed, "Notes & observations of Man's knowledge of God and the limited Capacity, of Mankind," 1792 (4 p.), and essays and extracts written by him, 1796, 1797, 1799, 38 pp. sewn together and 1797 Letter (request to borrow portrait of Wm. Penn from the Loganian Library) and multiple prints depicting Robert Proud;
  • ALS by William Penn (1776-1845), ca. 1820;
  • Dr. F. Daniel Lobstein's treatise, and announcement of his publication, "Semeioloy of the Eye for the use of Physicians...for criminal Jurisprudence", 1828;
  • Letter by John Jay Smith to W. Brooke Rawe?, 1880;
  • and other miscellaneous documents, including an invitation to a reception for Lord Coleridge, Chief Justice of England, 1883; also unsigned documents and fragments.
  • Map of Philadelphia by Thomas Holme, 1683, removed to 995R.

Dates

  • Creation: 1683-1859

Creator

Access Restrictions

The collection is open for research use.

Use Restrictions

Standard Federal Copyright Laws Apply (U.S. Title 17).

Biographical / Historical

John Jay Smith (1798-1881) was an editor and librarian. The son of John and Gulielma Maria (Morris) Smith, he was born on a farm at Green Hill, Burlington County, New Jersey. John Jay Smith attended the Friends' boarding school at Westtown, Pensylvania, and was then apprenticed to a druggist in Philadelphia. In 1821, he married Rachel Collins Pearsall; they had four sons and three daughters.

Smith was active in the establishment of a line of Conestoga wagons, operating as regular carriers between Philadelphia and Pittsburgh, but the enterprise was short-lived. In 1827, in partnership with George Taylor, he inaugurated the Pennsylvania Gazette. Two years later, he became librarian of the Library Company of Philadelphia; he was a hereditary trustee of the Loganian Library. He gathered for the institution a large collection of autographs and manuscripts relating to the history of New Jersey and Pennsylvania.

Smith suggested the re-publication of important foreign books in the form of a cheap weekly to Adam Waldie, a Philadelphia printer. Waldie's Select Circulating Library, under Smith's editorship, could be circulated through the mails. This was the first effort in America, on an extensive scale, to take advantage of the absence of international copyright. Within three months the work had a circulation of 6,000 copies a week, and for some years it enjoyed great success. During 1835, Smith edited the Museum of Foreign Literature, Science, and Art. In 1845, Lloyd Pearsall Smith, his son, began the publication Smith's Weekly Volume, a successor to Waldie's. In 1851, Smith retired from his librarianship so that Lloyd might be appointed in his place. His later literary work included the editing of Letters of Dr. Richard Hill (1854) and the authorship of a volume of entertaining gossip, written for his children, which was edited by his daughter and privately printed in 1892 under the title, Recollections of John Jay Smith Written by Himself.

Smith died at his estate, "Ivy Lodge," Germantown, Pennsylvania, at the age of 83.

From: "John Jay Smith."Dictionary of American Biography Base Set. American Council of Learned Societies, 1928-1936. Biography Resource Center. Farmington Hills, Mich.: Thomson Gale. 2007. http://galenet.galegroup.com/servlet/BioRC

Extent

0.5 Linear Feet (1 document box)

Language

English

Overview

Papers primarily consist of those received by his forebears and collected by John Jay Smith, an entrepreneur and a founder of the Pennsylvania Gazette. Also included are manuscripts of Robert Proud, a treatise by Dr. F. Daniel Lobstein, and a document in the hand of James Dickinson.

Separated Materials

Map of Philadelphia by Thomas Holme, 1683, removed to 995R.

Processing Information

Original processing information unknown.

Title
John Jay Smith papers, 1683-1859
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin

Revision Statements

  • June 2022: by Nathaniel Rehm-Daly, Harmful Language Revision Project

Find It at the Library

Most of the materials in this catalog are not digitized and can only be accessed in person. Please see our website for more information about visiting or requesting reproductions from Haverford College Quaker & Special Collections Library

Contact:
370 Lancaster Ave
Haverford PA 19041 USA US