Preliminary thereto, however, a brief
historical statement should be made of the beginnings
of the enterprises to which the Company succeeded.
In January, 1801, Colonel Paul Revere
bought the old powder-mill at Canton, where during
the Revolutionary War, largely by his instrumentality
and agency, the Colony and State had been supplied
with powder. He and his son, Mr. Joseph W. Revere,
under the firm-name of Paul Revere & Son, erected
and adapted the buildings necessary for the manufacture
of copper into sheets and bars.
In the years 1804 and 1805 Mr. J.
W. Revere spent considerable time on a visit to England
and the continent for the purpose of obtaining all
the information possible in the prosecution of their
undertaking.
Colonel Revere claims, in letters
written by him at the time, that their mill for rolling
copper was the first erected in this country. And
it may be said in passing that the copper trade in
England was hardly more advanced there than here.
Their business grew slowly, but it
made a steady progress until substantially established.
Colonel Revere died in 1818, but the son, Mr. Joseph
W. Revere, continued on with the manufactory started
at Canton until it became a part of the incorporated
Company.
Singularly coincident with the events
already narrated, Mr. James Davis, but five months
younger than Mr. Joseph W. Revere, had come to Boston
from Barnstable, his native town, and acquired here
a trade, reaching his majority in 1798.
In the very first years of the present
century he established himself on Union Street as
a brass founder. Here he continued, gradually
expanding the business until the admission of his
son, Mr. James Davis, Jr., as a partner, January 4,
1828, when the firm-name of James Davis & Son was
adopted.
These two enterprises naturally ran
along very much together in certain respects.
For instance, in their trade with shipbuilders, which
was an important feature with each; while the foundry
was turning out composition castings required for
fastenings, the mill was preparing copper in its various
forms for use on the same vessel.
It was therefore to be expected that
the rapid revival of our mercantile marine after the
close of the second war, giving to both these firms
a largely increased trade, would bring them into very
intimate relations and suggest to them the wisdom
of a more permanent union.
Out of these conditions finally grew
the incorporated Company, taking the family name of
its real founder, and known since as the Revere Copper
Company.
The card on the opposite page is printed
from the original copperplate, which must have been
engraved earlier than the year 1804. In that year
the foundry described as “at the north part of
Boston,” which was on Lynn Street, was so
seriously damaged in a severe gale that it was not
afterwards repaired nor occupied; its contents and
the work done there were transferred to the copper-mill
at Canton.
The plate is in possession of the
present Mr. J. W. Revere, son of the late Mr. John
Revere, and has been kindly loaned for use here.