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Otis Clapp

Otis Clapp (March 3, 1806 – September 18, 1886) was an American publisher, bookseller, homeopath, pharmacist, and politician who served as a collector of Internal Revenue; a member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives; a member and president of the Boston Board of Aldermen; and a member of the Boston Common Council.

Otis Clapp
Clapp, circa 1870
Collector of Internal Revenue
for the 4th district of Massachusetts
In office
1862–1875
PresidentAbraham Lincoln
Andrew Johnson
Ulysses S. Grant
Preceded byoffice established
President of the Boston Board of Aldermen
In office
1860
Preceded bySilas Peirce
Succeeded bySilas Peirce
Member of the Boston Board of Aldermen
In office
1860
Member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives
In office
1854
Member of the Boston Common Council
from the 6th ward
In office
1845–1846
Personal details
BornMarch 3, 1806
Westhampton, Massachusetts
Died18 September 1886(1886-09-18) (aged 80)
Brookline, Massachusetts
Resting placeWalnut Hills Cemetery, Brookline, Massachusetts
NationalityAmerican
Political partyRepublican
Spouse(s)
Ann Willington Emery Porter
(m. 1863; died 1843)

Mary Hadley
(m. 1844; died 1871)
Children6
OccupationPublisher, bookseller, homeopath, pharmacist, politician

Clapp began his career working in publisher. A believer in the New Church (Swedenborgianism), Clapp ultimately turned his focus in this field to New Church-related works.

A promoter of homeopathy, Clapp operated a large homeopathic pharmacy. This namesake business (Otis Clapp & Son) continued as a business after his death, evolving to encompass different areas of medical technology. It was one of the oldest-operating pharmaceutical manufacturers in the United States by the time it was acquired by Medique in 2008. Products continue to be sold by Medique under the brand name "Otis Clapp".

Clapp was a founder of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Early life and family edit

Clapp was born in Westhampton, Massachusetts on March 3, 1806.[1] Clapp was the son of Elisha Bascom Clapp and Sally Clapp (née Hale).[1][2]

Clapp's earliest ancestor in the United States was Roger Clapp. His maternal uncle was the Boston journalist Nathan Hale.[1]

Publishing and bookselling career edit

 
1861 advertisement for Clapp's bookselling and pharmaceuticals

In 1823 (at the age of 17) Clapp moved to Boston and worked under his uncle Nathan Hale in the counting room of Hale's Boston Daily Advertiser. After departing his job at his uncle's newspaper, Clapp himself became the publisher of the New England Galaxy,[1][3] a short-lived newspaper which ceased publication in 1829.[4][5] Clapp also became a bookseller and book publisher, co-founding the firm Stimpson & Clapp with Charles Stimpson.[1][3][6] This firm published a series of volumes titled "The American Library of Useful Knowledge", as well as the annual "Boston Directory".[1]

After dissolving the Stimpson & Clapp partnership in 1832, Clapp spent several years as a major publisher and distributor of New Church (Swedenborgianism) works,.[1][2][3] including books as well as New Jerusalem Magazine from 1832 until 1858 and Children's New Church Magazine from 1843 until 1858.[1] Clapp was himself an believer of the New Church ideology.[2] Clapp also became a strong supporter of homeopathy,[2] and was a prominent publisher of books about homeopathy.[7]

Career in homeopathic pharmaceutics edit

In 1840, Clapp opened a homeopathic pharmacy in the Back Bay of Boston.[8][2] At the time it opened, the city had only three or four homeopathic physicians.[2] The pharmacy is considered to have been the United States' second-established homeopathic pharmacy, and the first in the New England region.[2][7] Initially, its inventory was limited, however as homeopathy grew more popular in New England so too did the pharmacy. To grow, it moved the location of its storefront in both 1841 and 1855. It became one of the world's largest homeopathic pharmacies,[2] and was well-known and long-operating.[2] Clapp manufactured and marketed his own homeopathic medicines.[9]

 
Envelope addressed to Otis Clapp & Son

In the 1870s, his son (Dr. James Wilkinson Clapp) joined as a business partner of the operation,[8][6] which was renamed "Otis Clapp & Son" in 1874.[9]

The company continued to operate long after Clapp's own death. It expanded its business to laboratory equipment; including equipment for medicine and bacteriology.[10] By the 1890s, the company was manufacturing x-ray machines.[11] In 2008, the company (by then known as Otis Clapp and Buffington) was acquired by Medique Inc. It was, by that time, one of the oldest operating pharmaceutical manufacturers in the United States.[10] Products continue to be sold by Medique under the "Otis Clapp" brand name.[12]

Political and government career edit

 
Photograph of Clapp

Clapp served in both chambers of the (then-bicameral) Boston City Council. He first served as a member of the Common Council from the city's sixth ward from 1845 through 1846.[13] In 1860, Clapp served on the Boston Board of Aldermen (the other chamber of the Boston City Council),[13] having been elected as a nominee on the ticket of the Republican Party.[14] During his tenure, he served as the board's president.[13] At times, he acted out the duties of mayor when the mayor left the city.[15] He served on the board's Public Instruction, Public Library, Cemeteries, and Sewers committees.[16] Clapp held a number of other positions in municipal government.[1][3] During the years in between his tenures in the Boston City Council's chambers, Clapp served a term as a member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives in 1854.[1][17] He was also appointed by the Common Council in 1859 to serve as the city's assistant assessor for books and publishing.[18]

In 1862, President Abraham Lincoln appointed Clapp as the collector of Internal Revenue for the fourth district of Massachusetts. He served in that office until 1875.[1][2][8]

Other civic involvement edit

Clapp played a significant role in the founding of the Boston Female Medical College. He was also one of the founders of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.[2][19]

Clapp was involved on the corporate boards of several railroads. He was also on the boards of several charitable organizations. He served as president of the Washingtonian Home,[1] a role he held at the time of his death.[3] He also was involved with The Home for Little Wanderers.[1]

In some obituaries for Clapp (published in newspapers such as the Brooklyn Eagle), he was described as having been "prominent in many political, social and business reforms."[20]

Personal life and death edit

On August 29, 1833, Clapp married Ann Willington Emery Porter, daughter of Boston's Sylvanus Porter. She died in 1843. On October 2, 1844, Clapp married Mary Hadley, daughter of Boston's Moses Hadley.. His second wife died in 1871.[1] In 1907, the New England Historic Genealogical Society wrote that he had had six children, three with each of his wives.[1] However, his 1886 obituary in The Boston Globe described him as having fathered eleven children, four of whom had survived him.[21]

Clapp died in Brookline, Massachusetts on September 18, 1886 (at the age of 80).[1] He had been in ill health for the previous year, and had declined greatly in health beginning on July 3 of 1886.[3] He was buried at Walnut Hills Cemetery in Brookline.[22]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p "Memorial Biographies of the New–England Historic Genealogical Society Volume VIII 1800–1889" (PDF). New England Historic Genealogical Society Volume. 1907. pp. 275–276. Retrieved 5 May 2024.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Otis Clapp, Homeopathic Pharmacist, Swedenborgian & Publisher". Australian Postal History & Social Philately. 4 April 2023. Retrieved 5 May 2024.
  3. ^ a b c d e f "Death of Otis Clapp". The Brooklyn Union. Sep 19, 1886. Retrieved 5 May 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
  4. ^ Humanities, National Endowment for the. "New-England galaxy. [volume]". Library of Congress. Retrieved 5 May 2024.
  5. ^ O’Connor, Michael. "New England Galaxy Newspaper from 1820". Smithsonian National Postal Museum. Retrieved 5 May 2024.
  6. ^ a b "Successful Boston Firm". Druggists' Circular. 67. Oil, Paint and Drug Publishing Company, Incorporated: 578. 1923. Retrieved 6 May 2024.
  7. ^ a b "Otis Clapp". Center for the History of Medicine (Harvard Countway Library). Retrieved 5 May 2024.
  8. ^ a b c "Otis Clapp". Dorchester Atheneum. Retrieved 5 May 2024.
  9. ^ a b "Otis Clapp · Grand Delusion? · OnView". Center for the History of Medicine (Harvard Countway Library). Retrieved 5 May 2024.
  10. ^ a b "Otis Clapp and Son | People | The Collection of Historical Scientific Instruments". Harvard University. Retrieved 5 May 2024.
  11. ^ "Fig 14 - uploaded by Ronald K Poropatich". ResearchGate. Retrieved 5 May 2024.
  12. ^ "Otis Clapp/Dover". Medique. Retrieved 5 May 2024.
  13. ^ a b c "A Catalogue of the City Councils of Boston, 1822-1908, Roxbury, 1846-1867, Charlestown, 1847-1873 and of the Selectmen of Boston, 1634-1822: Also of Various Other Town and Municipal Officers". City of Boston Printing Department. 1909. pp. 45, 83, 100. Retrieved 30 October 2022.
  14. ^ "Municipal Nominations". Boston Evening Transcript. December 1, 1859. Retrieved 6 May 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
  15. ^ "Wendell Phillips, Theodore C. Pease, Speeches, Lectures and Letters of Wendell Phillips: Volume 1, chapter 25". www.perseus.tufts.edu. 1891. Retrieved 5 May 2024.
  16. ^ "Board of Aldermen". Boston Evening Transcript. January 9, 1860. Retrieved 6 May 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
  17. ^ "Members of the House of Representatives, 1854" (PDF), Journal of the House of Representatives of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, 1854, pp. 1045+
  18. ^ "Boston Common Council". Newspapers.com. Boston Evening Transcript. February 25, 1859. Retrieved 6 May 2024.
  19. ^ "An Account off the Proceedings Preliminary to the Organization of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology with a List of Members Thus Far Associated and an Appendix Containing Petitions and Resolutions in Aid of the Objects of the Committee of Associated Institutions of Science and Art" (PDF). Library of Congress. 1861. Retrieved 5 May 2024.
  20. ^ Multiple sources:
    • "Death of Otis Clapp". The Brooklyn Daily Eagle. 19 September 1886. Retrieved 5 May 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
    • "Death of Otis Clapp". The Daily Item. September 18, 1886. Retrieved 5 May 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
  21. ^ "Death of Otis Clapp". Newspapers.com. The Boston Globe. September 20, 1886. Retrieved 5 May 2024 – via Newspapers.com.
  22. ^ "Otis Clapp Buried Large Attendance of Physicians and Others at Funeral in Brookline". The Boston Globe. 21 September 1886. Retrieved 5 May 2024 – via Newspapers.com.

otis, clapp, march, 1806, september, 1886, american, publisher, bookseller, homeopath, pharmacist, politician, served, collector, internal, revenue, member, massachusetts, house, representatives, member, president, boston, board, aldermen, member, boston, comm. Otis Clapp March 3 1806 September 18 1886 was an American publisher bookseller homeopath pharmacist and politician who served as a collector of Internal Revenue a member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives a member and president of the Boston Board of Aldermen and a member of the Boston Common Council Otis ClappClapp circa 1870Collector of Internal Revenuefor the 4th district of MassachusettsIn office 1862 1875PresidentAbraham LincolnAndrew JohnsonUlysses S GrantPreceded byoffice establishedPresident of the Boston Board of AldermenIn office 1860Preceded bySilas PeirceSucceeded bySilas PeirceMember of the Boston Board of AldermenIn office 1860Member of the Massachusetts House of RepresentativesIn office 1854Member of the Boston Common Councilfrom the 6th wardIn office 1845 1846Personal detailsBornMarch 3 1806Westhampton MassachusettsDied18 September 1886 1886 09 18 aged 80 Brookline MassachusettsResting placeWalnut Hills Cemetery Brookline MassachusettsNationalityAmericanPolitical partyRepublicanSpouse s Ann Willington Emery Porter m 1863 died 1843 wbr Mary Hadley m 1844 died 1871 wbr Children6OccupationPublisher bookseller homeopath pharmacist politician Clapp began his career working in publisher A believer in the New Church Swedenborgianism Clapp ultimately turned his focus in this field to New Church related works A promoter of homeopathy Clapp operated a large homeopathic pharmacy This namesake business Otis Clapp amp Son continued as a business after his death evolving to encompass different areas of medical technology It was one of the oldest operating pharmaceutical manufacturers in the United States by the time it was acquired by Medique in 2008 Products continue to be sold by Medique under the brand name Otis Clapp Clapp was a founder of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Contents 1 Early life and family 2 Publishing and bookselling career 3 Career in homeopathic pharmaceutics 4 Political and government career 5 Other civic involvement 6 Personal life and death 7 ReferencesEarly life and family editClapp was born in Westhampton Massachusetts on March 3 1806 1 Clapp was the son of Elisha Bascom Clapp and Sally Clapp nee Hale 1 2 Clapp s earliest ancestor in the United States was Roger Clapp His maternal uncle was the Boston journalist Nathan Hale 1 Publishing and bookselling career edit nbsp 1861 advertisement for Clapp s bookselling and pharmaceuticals In 1823 at the age of 17 Clapp moved to Boston and worked under his uncle Nathan Hale in the counting room of Hale s Boston Daily Advertiser After departing his job at his uncle s newspaper Clapp himself became the publisher of the New England Galaxy 1 3 a short lived newspaper which ceased publication in 1829 4 5 Clapp also became a bookseller and book publisher co founding the firm Stimpson amp Clapp with Charles Stimpson 1 3 6 This firm published a series of volumes titled The American Library of Useful Knowledge as well as the annual Boston Directory 1 After dissolving the Stimpson amp Clapp partnership in 1832 Clapp spent several years as a major publisher and distributor of New Church Swedenborgianism works 1 2 3 including books as well as New Jerusalem Magazine from 1832 until 1858 and Children s New Church Magazine from 1843 until 1858 1 Clapp was himself an believer of the New Church ideology 2 Clapp also became a strong supporter of homeopathy 2 and was a prominent publisher of books about homeopathy 7 Career in homeopathic pharmaceutics editFurther information Otis Clapp amp Son In 1840 Clapp opened a homeopathic pharmacy in the Back Bay of Boston 8 2 At the time it opened the city had only three or four homeopathic physicians 2 The pharmacy is considered to have been the United States second established homeopathic pharmacy and the first in the New England region 2 7 Initially its inventory was limited however as homeopathy grew more popular in New England so too did the pharmacy To grow it moved the location of its storefront in both 1841 and 1855 It became one of the world s largest homeopathic pharmacies 2 and was well known and long operating 2 Clapp manufactured and marketed his own homeopathic medicines 9 nbsp Envelope addressed to Otis Clapp amp Son In the 1870s his son Dr James Wilkinson Clapp joined as a business partner of the operation 8 6 which was renamed Otis Clapp amp Son in 1874 9 The company continued to operate long after Clapp s own death It expanded its business to laboratory equipment including equipment for medicine and bacteriology 10 By the 1890s the company was manufacturing x ray machines 11 In 2008 the company by then known as Otis Clapp and Buffington was acquired by Medique Inc It was by that time one of the oldest operating pharmaceutical manufacturers in the United States 10 Products continue to be sold by Medique under the Otis Clapp brand name 12 Political and government career edit nbsp Photograph of Clapp Clapp served in both chambers of the then bicameral Boston City Council He first served as a member of the Common Council from the city s sixth ward from 1845 through 1846 13 In 1860 Clapp served on the Boston Board of Aldermen the other chamber of the Boston City Council 13 having been elected as a nominee on the ticket of the Republican Party 14 During his tenure he served as the board s president 13 At times he acted out the duties of mayor when the mayor left the city 15 He served on the board s Public Instruction Public Library Cemeteries and Sewers committees 16 Clapp held a number of other positions in municipal government 1 3 During the years in between his tenures in the Boston City Council s chambers Clapp served a term as a member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives in 1854 1 17 He was also appointed by the Common Council in 1859 to serve as the city s assistant assessor for books and publishing 18 In 1862 President Abraham Lincoln appointed Clapp as the collector of Internal Revenue for the fourth district of Massachusetts He served in that office until 1875 1 2 8 Other civic involvement editClapp played a significant role in the founding of the Boston Female Medical College He was also one of the founders of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology 2 19 Clapp was involved on the corporate boards of several railroads He was also on the boards of several charitable organizations He served as president of the Washingtonian Home 1 a role he held at the time of his death 3 He also was involved with The Home for Little Wanderers 1 In some obituaries for Clapp published in newspapers such as the Brooklyn Eagle he was described as having been prominent in many political social and business reforms 20 Personal life and death editOn August 29 1833 Clapp married Ann Willington Emery Porter daughter of Boston s Sylvanus Porter She died in 1843 On October 2 1844 Clapp married Mary Hadley daughter of Boston s Moses Hadley His second wife died in 1871 1 In 1907 the New England Historic Genealogical Society wrote that he had had six children three with each of his wives 1 However his 1886 obituary in The Boston Globe described him as having fathered eleven children four of whom had survived him 21 Clapp died in Brookline Massachusetts on September 18 1886 at the age of 80 1 He had been in ill health for the previous year and had declined greatly in health beginning on July 3 of 1886 3 He was buried at Walnut Hills Cemetery in Brookline 22 References edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Memorial Biographies of the New England Historic Genealogical Society Volume VIII 1800 1889 PDF New England Historic Genealogical Society Volume 1907 pp 275 276 Retrieved 5 May 2024 a b c d e f g h i j k Otis Clapp Homeopathic Pharmacist Swedenborgian amp Publisher Australian Postal History amp Social Philately 4 April 2023 Retrieved 5 May 2024 a b c d e f Death of Otis Clapp The Brooklyn Union Sep 19 1886 Retrieved 5 May 2024 via Newspapers com Humanities National Endowment for the New England galaxy volume Library of Congress Retrieved 5 May 2024 O Connor Michael New England Galaxy Newspaper from 1820 Smithsonian National Postal Museum Retrieved 5 May 2024 a b Successful Boston Firm Druggists Circular 67 Oil Paint and Drug Publishing Company Incorporated 578 1923 Retrieved 6 May 2024 a b Otis Clapp Center for the History of Medicine Harvard Countway Library Retrieved 5 May 2024 a b c Otis Clapp Dorchester Atheneum Retrieved 5 May 2024 a b Otis Clapp Grand Delusion OnView Center for the History of Medicine Harvard Countway Library Retrieved 5 May 2024 a b Otis Clapp and Son People The Collection of Historical Scientific Instruments Harvard University Retrieved 5 May 2024 Fig 14 uploaded by Ronald K Poropatich ResearchGate Retrieved 5 May 2024 Otis Clapp Dover Medique Retrieved 5 May 2024 a b c A Catalogue of the City Councils of Boston 1822 1908 Roxbury 1846 1867 Charlestown 1847 1873 and of the Selectmen of Boston 1634 1822 Also of Various Other Town and Municipal Officers City of Boston Printing Department 1909 pp 45 83 100 Retrieved 30 October 2022 Municipal Nominations Boston Evening Transcript December 1 1859 Retrieved 6 May 2024 via Newspapers com Wendell Phillips Theodore C Pease Speeches Lectures and Letters of Wendell Phillips Volume 1 chapter 25 www perseus tufts edu 1891 Retrieved 5 May 2024 Board of Aldermen Boston Evening Transcript January 9 1860 Retrieved 6 May 2024 via Newspapers com Members of the House of Representatives 1854 PDF Journal of the House of Representatives of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts 1854 pp 1045 Boston Common Council Newspapers com Boston Evening Transcript February 25 1859 Retrieved 6 May 2024 An Account off the Proceedings Preliminary to the Organization of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology with a List of Members Thus Far Associated and an Appendix Containing Petitions and Resolutions in Aid of the Objects of the Committee of Associated Institutions of Science and Art PDF Library of Congress 1861 Retrieved 5 May 2024 Multiple sources Death of Otis Clapp The Brooklyn Daily Eagle 19 September 1886 Retrieved 5 May 2024 via Newspapers com Death of Otis Clapp The Daily Item September 18 1886 Retrieved 5 May 2024 via Newspapers com Death of Otis Clapp Newspapers com The Boston Globe September 20 1886 Retrieved 5 May 2024 via Newspapers com Otis Clapp Buried Large Attendance of Physicians and Others at Funeral in Brookline The Boston Globe 21 September 1886 Retrieved 5 May 2024 via Newspapers com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Otis Clapp amp oldid 1222967678, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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