Joshua Hathaway Papers, 1831-1870, 1883


Summary Information
Title: Joshua Hathaway Papers
Inclusive Dates: 1831-1870, 1883

Creator:
  • Hathaway, Joshua, 1810-1863
Call Number: Wis Mss FU

Quantity: 1.2 c.f. (3 archives boxes)

Repository:
Archival Locations:
Wisconsin Historical Society (Map)

Abstract:
Letters received by Joshua Hathaway as government surveyor of Wisconsin Territory and as a general land agent stationed at Milwaukee, with some drafts of his replies. There are letters from Eastern and Chicago land speculators, regarding land purchases and lots in Kewaunee, Manitowoc, and Milwaukee, and along the Catfish and Rock rivers; from the New York-Wisconsin Land Company for which Hathaway became agent; letters to Hathaway and Solomon Juneau concerning the Milwaukee harbor survey; and routine correspondence with other land agents and agencies. There are a few letters from Lucius I. Barber describing the 1842 legislative session, from Albert G. Ellis, surveyor general at Dubuque, and Alexander J. Irwin, Green Bay postmaster; copies of surveying instructions; land records; and some family correspondence. Filed with these are small bound and hand-sewn volumes containing Hathaway's copies of field notes, accounts, reconnaisances, and maps showing early land sales.

Language: English

URL to cite for this finding aid: http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1711.dl/wiarchives.uw-whs-wis000fu
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Biography/History

Joshua Hathaway, pioneer surveyor, was born in Rome, N.Y., the son of Joshua and Elizabeth (Lord) Hathaway. His father fought with the Continental forces in the Revolutionary War and later was a judge in the court of common pleas, and a postmaster at Rome for thirty years. His mother was descended from John Haynes, who came to Boston in 1633 and became governor of Massachusetts in 1635, the founder of Connecticut, and governor of that state in 1639.

Young Hathaway first studied law at the wish of his father but later chose civil engineering because of his health. After fitting himself for the latter profession he secured, through the influence of his brother-in-law, Judge Samuel Beardsley, attorney-general of New York, an appointment as a federal surveyor in the Northwest territory. In 1832, with a group of twelve men as his assistants, he went to Chicago, where he made his headquarters. From Chicago he conducted surveying expeditions into the western portion of Michigan Territory, which is now a part of Wisconsin. Large areas of the state, especially the southern portion, were surveyed under his supervision, including the cities of Waukesha and Kewaunee.

In 1835 Hathaway transferred his headquarters to Milwaukee, pitching a tent in what is now a downtown location. He later bought the land from the government and built on it one of Milwaukee's first brick houses, his lifelong home. He became active in real estate promotion, and in the same year (1835) he was given a federal contract to survey outlying land in the Michigan territory.

After the organization of the Wisconsin Territorial government in 1836, Hathaway was named by Governor Henry Dodge to the post of district surveyor, July 8, 1836. In the Green Bay land sale of 1837 Hathaway's name appears among the buyers. The following year he was appointed public administrator of Milwaukee, later a function of the judge of probate court. In 1843 he won public election to the latter position. His information on land titles had become cyclopedic and in his official and business capacities he became a judge of last resort in settling intricate legal problems involving real estate transactions. Among his land interests along the Lake Michigan counties of Wisconsin, he was especially identified with the development of the village of Kewaunee.

When the Milwaukee and Watertown Plank Road company was organized in 1847, Hathaway was chosen as its secretary. In 1851 he was elected a school commissioner and reelected in the two succeeding years. Representing the First Ward in Milwaukee he was elected a street commissioner in 1852, a commissioner of surveys in 1853, and an assessor in 1854.

After the financial panic of 1857 Hathaway, Alexander Mitchell, and Charles Quentin were named as Commissioners of Public Debt. They were charged under legislative authority to readjust the debt load of Milwaukee, a task in which they were successful.

In the pioneer period before a minister had been obtained for the Episcopalians of Milwaukee, Hathaway acted as a lay clergyman. He later was one of the organizers of St. Paul's Episcopal church and a member of its vestry. Five years after he married his second cousin, Ann Jeanette Hathaway, in Buffalo, N.Y., October 10, 1842, both he and his wife (a Presbyterian) were converted to Catholicism. He was a Democrat, a member of Milwaukee's city council, a life member of the Wisconsin Historical Society, and a geologist and botanist of local reputation.

He died at Milwaukee in 1863 in the home on the site where he had pitched his tent 28 years previously. Surviving were his wife and five children, Andrew A., John E., Mary L., Jeanette, and Sarah Hathaway.

Scope and Content Note

The papers are organized in two groups: Correspondence and Land Survey Records.

Correspondence consists of letters received by Hathaway as government surveyor for District Number 1 of Wisconsin Territory and as a general land agent for Wisconsin stationed at Milwaukee, with some drafts of his replies. There are letters from eastern and Chicago land speculators, among whom are Levi and Samuel Beardsley, Gurdon S. and Thomas H. Hubbard, Randolph B. March, Walter L. Newberry, Joel Parker, Horatio Seymour, Mark Skinner, John Tracy, and Levi C. Turner regarding lots in Kewaunee, Manitowoc, and Milwaukee, and along the Catfish (Yahara) and Rock rivers; from Henry R. Schoolcraft, Mackinac, regarding land purchased jointly with Hathaway; and from Ebenezer Irving and others of the New York-Wisconsin Land Company for which Hathaway became agent. Also found are letters to Hathaway and Solomon Juneau concerning the Milwaukee harbor survey; and routine correspondence with other land agents and agencies including John Catlin, Madison; Nelson Dewey, Lancaster; William B. Ogden and partner, Chicago; Marshall M. Strong and Thomas Wright, Racine; and Washburn and Woodman, Mineral Point. There is some family correspondence and a few letters from Lucius I. Barber, territorial representative, describing the 1842 territorial session; Albert G. Ellis, surveyor general at Dubuque, regarding the Amable Grignon mill on the Wisconsin River and the rights of the Menominee nation; and Alexander J. Irwin, Green Bay postmaster, regarding his land and other ventures. Some copies of surveying instructions, contracts, agreements, and land schedules accompany the letters.

The Land Survey Records include small bound and hand-sewn volumes containing Hathaway's copies of field notes, accounts, reconnaissances, and maps showing early land sales.

Administrative/Restriction Information
Acquisition Information

Presented by Andrew A. Hathaway and John E. Hathaway, March 1926.


Processing Information

Reprocessed by Max J. Evans, December 9, 1977.


Contents List
Correspondence
Note: Eight letters, 1836-1850, have been removed from the Correspondence series of the collection and placed in the vault because of their exceptional philatelic value. Xerox copies of these eight letters have been substituted for the originals in the collection.
Box   1
Folder   1-8
1831-1844
Box   2
Folder   1-8
1845-1850
Box   3
Folder   1
1851-1883, undated
Land Survey Records
Box   3
Folder   2
Special instructions to Joshua Hathaway, 1836; Lists of land for sale, , 1848, 1854
Field notes
Box   3
Folder   3
Townships 1-3, ranges 20-24 East
Box   3
Folder   4
Townships 7-15, ranges 21-23 East
Box   3
Folder   5-6
Townships 19-29, ranges 1-25, East
Box   3
Folder   7
Meanders and unidentified locations