Quincy Adams Shaw | |
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Quincy Adams Shaw
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Born |
Beacon Hill, Boston, Massachusetts, United States |
February 8, 1825
Died | June 12, 1908 Jamaica Plain, Boston, Massachusetts, United States |
(aged 83)
Resting place | Forest Hills Cemetery, Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts, United States |
Spouse(s) | Pauline Agassiz (6 February 1841 – 10 February 1917) |
Children |
Louis Agassiz Shaw (September 18, 1861 – July 2, 1891) |
Parent(s) |
Robert Gould Shaw (1776 – 1853) |
Notes | |
Louis Agassiz Shaw (September 18, 1861 – July 2, 1891)
Pauline Shaw
Marian Shaw
Quincy Adams Shaw (July 30, 1869 – May 8, 1960)
Robert Gould Shaw (1776 – 1853)
Quincy Adams Shaw (February 8, 1825 – June 12, 1908) was a Boston Brahmin investor and business magnate who was the first president of Calumet and Hecla Mining Company.
Shaw came from a famous and moneyed Boston family. With a net worth of $1,000,000 dollars in 1846, Shaw's father (Robert Gould Shaw, 1776 – 1853) was one of the wealthiest men in Boston. His mother was Elizabeth Willard Parkman (31 March 1785 – 14 April 1853), whose father Samuel Parkman (August 22, 1751 – June 11, 1824) was the original source of capital upon which her husband built one of the wealthiest and largest business enterprises in Boston at that time.George Parkman (February 19, 1790 – November 23, 1849), a wealthy Boston physician who was murdered in 1849 in a gruesome and highly publicized case, was Elizabeth's brother.
Shaw was good friends with his cousin, American historian Francis Parkman Junior (September 16, 1823 – November 8, 1893), and the pair travelled together to the American West after graduating from Harvard University in 1845. Parkman's 1849 book, The Oregon Trail: Sketches of Prairie and Rocky-Mountain Life is dedicated to Shaw.
Shaw's older brother Francis George Shaw (October 23, 1809 – November 7, 1882) was an outspoken advocate of the abolition of slavery. Shaw's nephew, son of Francis George, was Robert Gould Shaw (October 10, 1837 – July 18, 1863). The latter was a colonel in the Volunteer Army of the United States during the American Civil War, and commander of the all-black 54th Regiment. Colonel Robert Gould Shaw was killed in action during the Second Battle of Fort Wagner in 1863.