TABLE OF CONTENTS


Overview of the Collection

Biographical Note

Scope and Contents

Restrictions

Detailed Description of the Collection

Explanatory letter and biographical information,

The Papers of Ichabod Washburn



Overview of the Collection

Repository: Worcester Polytechnic Institute
100 Institute Road
Worcester, MA 01609
508-831-6612 / archives@wpi.edu
Creator: Ichabod Washburn (1798-1868)
Title: Ichabod Washburn Papers
Dates: 1865-1978
Quantity: 1 document case = .45 linear feet
Abstract: Most of these papers were given to WPI by the American Antiquarian Society in 1946. They came to the AAS from the old records of Peter C. Bacon, one of the administrators of Ichabod Washburn's estate. The biographical materials and photograph were part of WPI's files.
Identification: MS26
Language: The records are in English.

Biographical Note

Ichabod Washburn was born August 11, 1798 in Kingston, Massachusetts. His family was very poor, and he was apprenticed at the age of nine to a chaise, harness, and trunk maker in Duxbury. By the age of sixteen, Washburn had moved to Leicester and was apprenticed to a blacksmith. A few years later he established his own business in Millbury making agricultural implements. By 1820, he had come to Worcester, and, with Benjamin Goddard, established a business making woolen machinery. In 1824 he began making card wire at a factory in Northville. By the 1830s, when Mr. Goddard retired from the business, Mr. Washburn, with the help of Stephen Salisbury II, had moved his business to Grove Street and the company was making piano wire and wire for many other uses. In 1850, his son-in-law became a partner of the firm, known as Washburn & Moen Manufacturing Company (later a subsidisry of U.S. Steel). By 1865, Washburn & Moen was the largest wire mill in the world. Mr. Washburn gave much of his wealth to worthy causes during his lifetime and bequethed much of his estate to help the poor and needy. He had, for some years before John Boynton's offer of money for an endowment and support for a school, hoped to establish a school which would train young people for mechanical trades. Boynton's offer was made on the condition that the people of Worcester provide the land and buildings for a school. Seth Sweetser and Emory Washburn, who Boynton approached, broadened the aim of the school to provide an "industrial education". It was Ichabod Washburn, who recieved a letter from the original committee set up to solicit money and land to build the school, who insisted that this industrial education have a strong practical component. To that end, he offered to build and equip a machine shop for the school. Mr. Washburn died December 30, 1868, before the shops were completed, but his will provided for their completion. Reading the biographical materials in this collecction, as well as Mildred McClary Tymeson's account in 'Two Towers' will provide more information and opinions as to the central role Ichabod Washburn played in establishing the school which became Worcester Polytechnic Institute.

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Scope and Contents

The bulk of the materials in this collection is bills, receipts, and accounting relating to the building of Washburn Shops, ranging from 1868 to 1873. This includes a list of expenses over the years which totalled $52, 000 in 1872. Also included is a copy of the original 1865 subscription list for "Scientific School in Worcester," with Mr. Washburn's offer to erect and equip a machine shop for the school. Mr. Washburn's will is also part of the collection. These materials came from the American Antiquarian Society, and were arranged by date in five folders, which are at the back of the collection. The collection also includes biographical materials, ranging in date from 1928 to 1978. A booklet by George I. Rockwood, published in 1943 and titled "The Founder of the Worcester Polytechnic Institute," makes a case for declaring Ichabod Washburn the real founder. A photograph of Mr. Washburn is at the end of the collection.

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Restrictions

Restrictions on Access

Permission from Archivist required.

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Detailed Description of the Collection

Explanatory letter and biographical information,
Box 1 Folder 1 Explanatory letter from American Antiquarian Society re. Ichoabod Washburn materials, plus record of Washburn materials AAS has, June 25, 1946 and 2006
Folder 2 Biographical Information - card, two-page biographical sketch, article from "Stamping Life," "The Founder of Worcester Polytechnic Institute" by George Rockwood, "Ichabod Washburn made wire work for him", 1928-1978
Folder 3 Copy of original subscriptions to the Scientific School in Worcester, March 27, 1865
Folder 4 Bills to Ichabod Washburn for construction of Industrial Shop, 1868
Folder 5 Will and Testament of Ichabod Washburn and Inventory, December 1868
Folder 6 Bills and checks for Washburn Shop, 1866-1870
Folder 7 Bills, receipts, accounting from Eastate of Ichabod Washburn for Washburn Shop, January 1869
Folder 8 Bills, receipts, accounting from Estate of Ichabod Washburn for Washburn Shop, February 1869
Folder 9 Bills, receitps, accounting from Estate of Ichabod Washburn for Washburn Shop, March 1869
Folder 10 Bills, receipts, accounting from Estate of Ichabod Washburn for Washburn Shop, April 1869
Folder 11 3 documents re. ownership of machine shop: Demand for payment by WFIIS, decision in favor of same, acknowledged receipt of Deed of Conveyance from Ichabod Washburn Estate, April and May, 1869
Folder 12 Bills, receipts, accounting from Estate of Ichabod Washburn for Washburn Shop, May 1869
Folder 13 Bills, receipts, accounting from Estate of Ichabod Washburn for Washburn Shop, June 1869
Folder 14 Bills, receipts, accounting from Estate of Ichabod Washburn for Washburn Shop, July 1869
Folder 15 Bills, reciepts, accounting from Estate of Ichabod Washburn for Washburn Shop, August-December 1869
Folder 16 Receipts for payments from Estate of Ichabod Washburn and related documents, 1870
Folder 17 Receipts and accounting from Estate of Ichabod Washburn for Washburn Shop, including total accounting to date, 1872
Folder 18 Receipts and accounting from Estate of Ichabod Washburn for Washburn Shop, 1873
Folder 19 American Antiquarian Society Folders 1-5,
Folder 20 Photographs of Ichabod Washburn and list with Washburn's signature, 1814(?)