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Encyclopedia > John Murray Forbes
John Murray Forbes
John Murray Forbes

John Murray Forbes (February 23, 1813 - October 12, 1898), one of three brothers sent by their uncle to Canton, amassed a fortune in the opium trade and China trade during the Opium Wars.


His parents were Ralph Bennet Forbes and Margaret Perkins, youngest daughter of the Perkins family, a merchant banking family in the China trade. He was born in Bordeaux, France. The Forbes family settled in Milton, Massachusetts. His father was an energetic but unsuccessful businessman who died when John was only six.


Forbes attended school at Phillips Academy in Andover, Massachusetts, then at Round Hill School in Northampton, Massachusetts, from 1823-28.


He settled in Boston and became an early railroad investor and landowner. As with Jay Gould and E. H. Harriman, he was an important figure in the building of America's railroad system. Between 1846 and 1855, as president of Michigan Central Railroad, and as a director and president of the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy line, he helped with the growth of the American Middle West.


He supplied money and weapons to New Englanders to fight slavery in Kansas and in 1859 entertained John Brown. In 1860 he was an elector for Abraham Lincoln, and was a delegate to the Republican conventions of 1876, 1880 and 1884. He became displeased with the Republican party and worked successfully to get Democrat Grover Cleveland elected President.


Edward Waldo Emerson, Ralph Waldo Emerson's son, published Forbes biography in the September 1899 issue of "Atlantic" magazine. The Emerson and Forbes families were close. John Murray's son, William Forbes, married Ralph's daughter, Edith Emerson. In 1871, Ralph, John, Edward, Edith and William visited an opium den in San Francisco. In Letters and Social Aims, Ralph Waldo Emerson wrote of Forbes: "Never was such force, good meaning, good sense, good action, combined with such domestic lovely behavior, such modesty and persistent preference for others. Wherever he moved he was the benefactor... How little this man suspects, with his sympathy for men and his respect for lettered and scientific people, that he is not likely, in any company, to meet a man superior to himself," and "I think this is a good country that can bear such a creature as he."


His brother is the great-grandfather of 2004 U.S. Democratic presidential candidate John Forbes Kerry.


See also

Biography

  • Life and Recollections of John Murray Forbes, ed. by Sarah Forbes Hughes, Two Volumes, Houghton, Mifflin & Co., 1899.
  • An American Railroad Builder: John Murray Forbes, by Henry Pearson, Houghton, Mifflin & Co., 1911.
  • Forbes: Telephone Pioneer, by Arthur Pier, 1953.

External link

  • Dictionary of Unitarian & Universalist Biography: John Murray Forbes (http://www.uua.org/uuhs/duub/articles/johnforbes.html)

  Results from FactBites:
 
LM (261 words)
Forbes graduated from Columbia College in 1827 and from the General Theological Seminary in 1830.
Forbes was ordained a Roman Catholic priest on Nov. 16, 1850.
Forbes was the first person elected dean of the General Theological Seminary by the Board of Trustees under the revised statutes of 1867.
John Murray Forbes (1936 words)
John Murray Forbes (February 23, 1813-October 12, 1898), a leading Boston businessman and philanthropist, financed and operated a great nineteenth century industrial empire.
Forbes served as the President of the Michigan Central Railroad from 1846 to 1855.
Forbes was well-informed of the value of this region as, five years earlier, Louis Agassiz of Harvard College, Forbes's friend from the Boston Saturday Club, had led an expedition through the area noting the best timber and mining lands.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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