Boston Brahmin
A Boston Brahmin is a member of Boston's traditional upper class.[1] Members of Boston's Brahmin class form an integral part of the historic core of the East Coast establishment, and are often associated with the distinctive Boston Brahmin accent, Harvard University, and traditional Anglo-American customs and clothing. Descendants of the earliest English colonists, such as those who came to America on the Mayflower or the Arbella, are often considered to be the most representative of the Boston Brahmins.[2]
The term was coined by the physician and writer Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr., in an 1860 article in the Atlantic Monthly.[3] The term Brahmin refers to the highest ranking caste of people in the traditional Hindu system of castes. In the United States, it has been applied to the old, wealthy New England families of British Protestant origin which were influential in the development of American institutions and culture. The term effectively underscores the strong conviction of the New England gentry that they were a people set apart by destiny to guide the American experiment as their ancestors had played a leading role in founding it. The term also illustrates the erudite and exclusive nature of the New England gentry as perceived by outsiders, and may also refer to their interest in Eastern religions, fostered perhaps by the impact in the 19th century of the transcendentalist writings of New England literary icons such as Ralph Waldo Emerson and Walt Whitman, and the enlightened appeal of Universalist Unitarian movements of the same period.
Characteristics
The nature of the Brahmins is hinted at by the doggerel "Boston Toast" by Holy Cross alumnus John Collins Bossidy:
- And this is good old Boston,
- The home of the bean and the cod,
- Where the Lowells talk only to Cabots,
- And the Cabots talk only to God.[4][5]
While some 19th-century Brahmin families of large fortune were of bourgeois origin, others were of aristocratic origin. The new families were often the first to seek, in typically British fashion, suitable marriage alliances with those old aristocratic New England families that were descended from landowners in England to elevate and cement their social standing. The Winthrops, Dudleys, Saltonstalls, Winslows, Lowells, and Lymans (descended from English magistrates, gentry, and aristocracy) were, by and large, happy with this arrangement. All of Boston's "Brahmin elite", therefore, maintained the received culture of the old English gentry, including cultivating the personal excellence that they imagined maintained the distinction between gentlemen and freemen, and between women and ladies. They saw it as their duty to maintain what they defined as high standards of excellence, duty, and restraint. Cultivated, urbane, and dignified, a Boston Brahmin was supposed to be the very essence of enlightened aristocracy.[6][7] The ideal Brahmin was not only wealthy, but displayed what was considered suitable personal virtues and character traits. The Brahmin was expected to maintain the customary English reserve in his dress, manner, and deportment, cultivate the arts, support charities such as hospitals and colleges, and assume the role of community leader.[8]:14 Although the ideal called on him to transcend commonplace business values, in practice many found the thrill of economic success quite attractive. The Brahmins warned each other against avarice and insisted upon personal responsibility. Scandal and divorce were unacceptable. The total system was buttressed by the strong extended family ties present in Boston society. Young men attended the same prep schools, colleges, and private clubs,[9] and heirs married heiresses. Family not only served as an economic asset, but also as a means of moral restraint. Most belong to the Unitarian or Episcopal churches, although some were Congregationalists or Methodists. Politically they were successively Federalists, Whigs, and Republicans. They were marked by their manners and once distinctive elocution, the Boston Brahmin accent, a version of the New England accent. Their distinctive Anglo-American manner of dress has been much imitated and is the foundation of the style now informally known as preppy.
Brahmin families
Many of the Brahmin families trace their ancestry back to the original 17th- and 18th-century colonial ruling class consisting of Massachusetts governors and magistrates, Harvard presidents, distinguished clergy and fellows of the Royal Society of London (a leading scientific body), while others entered New England aristocratic society during the 19th century with their profits from commerce and trade, often marrying into established Brahmin families such as the Welds, Saltonstalls, Lymans, Sargents, Emersons, Winslows, Warrens and Winthrops. A few families are listed here.
Adams
- Samuel Adams (1722–1803): Founding Father
- John Adams (1735–1826): Founding Father and second President of the United States, husband of Abigail Smith Adams (1744–1818)
- John Quincy Adams (1767–1848): sixth President of the United States
- Charles Francis Adams, Sr. (1807–1886): Ambassador, U.S. congressman
- Charles Francis Adams, Jr. (1835–1915): Civil War general
- John Quincy Adams II (1833–1894): lawyer, politician
- Charles Francis Adams III (1866–1954): U.S. Secretary of the Navy
- Charles Francis Adams IV (1910–1999): industrialist, first president of Raytheon
- Charles Francis Adams III (1866–1954): U.S. Secretary of the Navy
- Henry Brooks Adams (1838–1918): author
- Brooks Adams (1848–1927): historian
- Ivers Whitney Adams (1838–1914): founder of the oldest continuously playing professional baseball team, the Boston Red Stockings
- Charles Francis Adams, Sr. (1807–1886): Ambassador, U.S. congressman
- John Quincy Adams (1767–1848): sixth President of the United States
Amory
- John Amory Lowell (1798–1881): merchant
- Thomas Coffin Amory (1812–1889): lawyer, author
- Thomas Jonathan Coffin Amory (1828–1864): Civil War general
- Ernest Amory Codman (1869–1940): surgeon
- Cleveland Amory (1917–1998): author
Appleton
Patrilineal line:
- Daniel Appleton (1785–1849): publisher
- Frances Appleton (died 1861): wife of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
- George Swett Appleton (1821–1878): publisher
- Jane Means Appleton Pierce (1806–1863): wife of U.S. President Franklin Pierce, was First Lady of the United States from 1853 to 1857
- Jesse Appleton (1772–1819): second president of Bowdoin College
- John Appleton (1816–1864): assistant Secretary of State, diplomat, U.S. congressman
- John Appleton: Chief Justice of the Maine Supreme Judicial Court
- John F. Appleton: lawyer and Union colonel in the American Civil War
- John James Appleton (1789–1864): ambassador
- Nathan Appleton (1771–1861): U.S. congressman and merchant
- Nathaniel Appleton (1693–1784): Congregational minister
- Samuel Appleton (1625–1696): military and government leader in the Massachusetts Bay Colony and Province of Massachusetts Bay
- Samuel Appleton (1766–1853): merchant and philanthropist
- Thomas Gold Appleton (1812–1884): writer and art patron
- William Appleton (1786–1862): U.S. congressman
- William Henry Appleton (1814–1899): publisher
- William Sumner Appleton (1874–1947): philanthropist
Other notable relatives
- Thomas Storrow Brown (1803–1888): journalist, writer, orator, and revolutionary in Lower Canada (present-day Quebec)
- Edward Augustus Holyoke (1728–1829): educator and physician
- Alice Mary Longfellow (1850–1928): philanthropist and preservationist
- Ernest Wadsworth Longfellow (1845–1921): artist
- Alpheus Spring Packard (1839–1905): entomologist and palaeontologist
- William Alfred Packard (1830–1909): classical scholar
- Charles Storrow Williams (1827–?): Director of Railroad Transportation for the Confederate States of America
- Edward H. Williams (1824–1899): physician and railroad executive
Bacon
- Robert Bacon (1860–1919): U.S. Secretary of State
- Robert L. Bacon (1884–1938): U.S. congressman
- Gaspar G. Bacon (1886–1947): politician
- Gaspar G. Bacon, Jr. (1914–1943): actor
Boylston
Boylston family
- Thomas Boylston (b. 1644): doctor, family patriarch
- Zabdiel Boylston (1679–1766): physician
- Ward Nicholas Boylston (1747–1828): benefactor, Harvard University
Bradlee
- Nathan Bradley I: earliest known member born in America, in Dorchester, Boston, Massachusetts, in 1631
- Samuel Bradlee: constable of Dorchester, Massachusetts
- Nathaniel Bradlee: Boston Tea Party participant, member of Massachusetts Charitable Mechanic Association
- Josiah Bradlee I: Boston Tea Party participant; m. Hannah Putnam
- Josiah Bradlee III (Harvard): m. Alice Crowninsheld
- Frederick Josiah Bradlee I (Harvard): Director of the Boston Bank
- Frederick Josiah Bradlee, Jr. (Harvard-1915): on the first All-American football team at Harvard; m. Chevalier Josephine de Gersdorff
- Frederick Josiah Bradlee III: Broadway actor, author
- Benjamin Crowninshield Bradlee (1921–2014) (Harvard-1942): Chief Executive Editor of The Washington Post
- Frederick Josiah Bradlee, Jr. (Harvard-1915): on the first All-American football team at Harvard; m. Chevalier Josephine de Gersdorff
- Samuel Bradlee, Jr.: lieutenant colonel during the American Revolutionary War
- Thomas Bradlee: Boston Tea Party participant; member of Massachusetts Charitable Mechanics Association; Member of the St. Andrews Lodge of Freemasons
- David Bradlee: Boston Tea Party participant; Captain in the Continental Army, member of the St. Andrews Lodge of Freemasons
- Sarah Bradlee: "Mother of the Boston Tea Party"
Cabot
Chaffee/Chafee
Chaffee family, originally of Hingham, Massachusetts[17]
- Thomas Chaffee (1610–1683), businessman and landowner
- Jonathon Chaffee (1678–1766), businessman and landowner
- Matthew Chaffee (1657–1723), Boston landowner
- Adna Romanza Chaffee (1842–1914): U.S. general
- Adna R. Chaffee, Jr. (1884–1941): U.S. general
- Zechariah Chafee (1885–1957): philosopher, civil libertarian
- John Chafee (1922–1999): U.S. senator
- Lincoln Chafee (b. 1953): former U.S. senator, former Rhode Island governor, 2016 U.S. presidential candidate for the Democratic party
Choate
- Rufus Choate (1799–1859): U.S. senator
- George C. S. Choate (1827–1896): founder of Choate Sanitarium, Pleasantville, New York
- Joseph Hodges Choate (1832–1917): lawyer, diplomat
- William Gardner Choate (1830–1920): U.S. federal judge, founder of Choate Rosemary Hall
- Sarah Choate Sears (1858–1935): art patron
- Robert B. Choate, Jr. (1924–2009): businessman
- Elizabeth Choate Spykman (1896–1965): writer
Codman
- Ogden Codman, Jr. (1863–1951): architect
Coffin
Coffin family, originally of Newbury and Nantucket
- Tristram Coffin (1604–1681): colonist, original owner of Nantucket
- William Coffin (1699–1775): merchant, co-founder of Trinity Church
- Sir Isaac Coffin (1759–1839): naval officer
- Charles E. Coffin (1841–1912): industrialist, U.S. congressman
- Charles A. Coffin (1844–1926): industrialist, co-founder of General Electric
- Henry Coffin Nevins (1843–1892): industrialist
- John Coffin Jones, Sr. (1750–1820): Speaker of the Massachusetts House of Representatives
- John Coffin Jones, Jr. (1796–1861): U.S. Minister to Hawaii
- Thomas Coffin Amory (1812–1889): lawyer, author
- Thomas Jonathan Coffin Amory (1828–1864): Civil War general
Coolidge
- T. Jefferson Coolidge (1831-1920), Financier, industrialist, and civic leader
- John Coolidge (1906–2000): businessman
- Archibald Cary Coolidge (1866–1928): educator
- John Coolidge Adams (b. 1947): composer
- John Gardner Coolidge (1863–1936): U.S. ambassador
- Charles A. Coolidge (1844–1926): U.S. Army general
Cooper
- John Cooper (1609–1669): colonist
- Samuel Cooper (1725–1783): clergyman
- Samuel D. Cooper, Jr. (1750–1824): revolutionary
- Samuel D. Cooper III (1778–1853): trade merchant
- Priscilla Cooper Tyler (1816–1889): First Lady of the United States
- Theodore Cooper (1839–1919): civil engineer
- Frederic Taber Cooper (1864–1937): writer
Crowninshield
- Johann Casper Richter von Kronenscheldt: colonist
- Jacob Crowninshield (1770–1808): U.S. congressman
- Arent S. Crowninshield (1843–1908): U.S. Navy admiral
- Caspar Crowninshield (1837–1897): Union Army general
- Benjamin William Crowninshield (1837–1892): Union Army colonel
- Frederic Crowninshield (1845–1918): first president of the National Society of Mural Painters
- Benjamin Williams Crowninshield (1772–1851): 5th U.S. Secretary of Navy
- Frank Crowninshield (1872–1947): creator and editor of Vanity Fair
- Bowdin Bradlee Crowninshield (1867–1948): American naval architect
Descendants by marriage:
- William Crowninshield Endicott (1826–1900): 5th U.S. Secretary of War
- Frederick Josiah Bradlee, Jr. (1892–1970): on the first All-American football team (from Harvard)
- Benjamin Crowninshield Bradlee (1921–2014): Editor-in-chief of The Washington Post
- Quinn Crowninshield Bradlee (b. 1982): founder and CEO of FriendsOfQuinn.com
Cushing
Cushing family, originally of Hingham, Massachusetts[18]
- Caleb Cushing (1800–1879): U.S. congressman and Attorney General
- John Perkins Cushing (1787–1862): China trade merchant, investor
- Thomas Cushing (1725–1788): statesman, revolutionary
- William Cushing (1732–1810): U.S. Supreme Court justice
- Harvey Cushing (1869–1939): neurosurgeon
Descendant by marriage:
- Albert Cushing Read (1887–1967): naval officer
Dana
- Richard Dana (1699–1772): colonial Boston politician
- Francis Dana (1743–1811): revolutionary
- Richard Henry Dana, Sr. (1787–1879): lawyer, author
- Richard Henry Dana, Jr. (1815–1882): lawyer, author (Two Years Before the Mast)
Delano
- Columbus Delano (1809–1896): U.S. Secretary of the Interior
- Jane Delano (1862–1919): founder of the American Red Cross Nursing Service
- Paul Delano (1745–1842): naval officer
- Franklin Delano Roosevelt (1882–1945): President of the United States
Dudley
- Thomas Dudley (1576–1653): Governor of Massachusetts, a founder of Harvard College
- Anne Dudley Bradstreet (1612–1672): first American poet, wife of Royal Governor Simon Bradstreet
- Joseph Dudley (1647–1720): Royal Governor of Massachusetts, President of the Dominion of New England, Chief Justice of New York, Member of Parliament, Lt. Governor of the Isle of Wight
- Paul Dudley (1675–1751): Chief Justice of Massachusetts, member of the Royal Society, founder of the Dudleian lectures at Harvard
- Paul Dudley Sargent (1745–1828): Army colonel and Revolutionary War hero
- Dudley Saltonstall (1738–1796): Naval commodore during the Revolution and successful privateer
Dwight
- Timothy Dwight IV (1752–1817): president of Yale University
- Joseph Dwight (1703–1765): lawyer, French and Indian War veteran
- James Dwight Dana (1813–1895): geologist
Eliot
- Charles William Eliot (1834–1926): president of Harvard University
- Charles Eliot (1859–1897): landscape architect
- Samuel A. Eliot II (1862–1950): president of the American Unitarian Association
- William Greenleaf Eliot (1811–1887): educator, Unitarian minister, and civic leader
- Henry Ware Eliot (1843–1919) industrialist and philanthropist, co-founder of Washington University
- T. S. Eliot (1888–1965): poet
- Henry Ware Eliot (1843–1919) industrialist and philanthropist, co-founder of Washington University
- Samuel Eliot Morison (1887–1976): maritime author
- Theodore Lyman Eliot (1928-...), diplomat
Descendant by marriage:
- Charles Eliot Norton (1827–1908): author
Emerson
- Rev. William Emerson (1769–1811): clergyman; m. Ruth Haskins Emerson
- Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882): poet; m. Lydia Jackson Emerson
Endicott
- William Crowninshield Endicott (1826–1900): U.S. Secretary of War
- Augustus Bradford Endicott (1818–1910): politician
- Philip Endicott Young (1885–1955): industrialist
- Henry Bradford Endicott (1853–1920): industrialist
- Henry Wendell Endicott (1880–1954)
Forbes
- John Murray Forbes (1813–1898): industrialist
- John Forbes Kerry (b. 1943): United States Secretary of State, senator from Massachusetts (1985–2013)
- Elliot Forbes (1917–2006): conductor and musicologist
- Robert Bennet Forbes (1804–1889): sea captain, China merchant, ship owner, writer
Gardner
Gardner family, originally of Essex county
- Samuel Pickering Gardner (1767–1843):[19] merchant
- John Lowell Gardner (1808–1884): merchant
- John Lowell Gardner II (1837–1898): merchant
- Augustus P. Gardner (1865–1918): U.S. congressman
Gillett
- Jonathan Gillett (1609-1677): colonist
- Edward Bates Gillett (1817-1899): Attorney
- Frederick Huntington Gillett (1851-1935): 37th Speaker of the United States House of Representatives
- Arthur Lincoln Gillett (1859-1938): clergyman
Healey / Dall
- Mark Healey (1791–1872): originally of New Hampshire, merchant and first president of the Merchant's Bank[20]
- Caroline Wells Healey (1822–1912), writer, feminist, and abolitionist
- Charles Henry Appleton Dall (1816–1886), first Unitarian minister to India
- William Healey Dall (1845–1912), malacologist, paleontologist, and explorer of Alaska
Holmes
- Abiel Holmes (1763–1837): clergyman
- Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr. (1809–1894): doctor, author
- Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. (1841–1935): U.S. Supreme Court justice
- Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr. (1809–1894): doctor, author
Jackson
- Edward Jackson (1708–1757): colonist; m. Dorothy Quincy Jackson
- Jonathan Jackson (1743–1810): merchant, revolutionary; m. Hannah Tracy Jackson
- Charles Jackson (1775–1855): Massachusetts Supreme Court justice
- Amelia Lee Jackson, who married Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr. above
- Patrick Tracy Jackson (1780–1847): co-founder of the Boston Manufacturing Company
- Hannah Jackson: wife of Francis Cabot Lowell
- Charles Jackson (1775–1855): Massachusetts Supreme Court justice
- Jonathan Jackson (1743–1810): merchant, revolutionary; m. Hannah Tracy Jackson
- Lydia Jackson: wife of Ralph Waldo Emerson
Lawrence
Lawrence family of Mass, original settlers of Watertown, Mass John Lawrence 1609-1667
- Samuel Lawrence (d. 1827): revolutionary
- Amos Lawrence (1786–1852): merchant
- Amos Adams Lawrence (1814–1886): abolitionist
- William Lawrence (1850–1941): Episcopal bishop
- William Appleton Lawrence (1889–1963): Episcopal bishop
- Frederic C. Lawrence (1899–1989): Episcopal bishop
- William Lawrence (1850–1941): Episcopal bishop
- Amos Adams Lawrence (1814–1886): abolitionist
- Abbott Lawrence (1792–1855): U.S. congressman, founder of Lawrence, Massachusetts
- Luther Lawrence (d. 1839): politician
- Amos Lawrence (1786–1852): merchant
Descendant by marriage: Abbott Lawrence Lowell (1856–1943): president of Harvard University
Lodge
- John Ellerton Lodge, married Anna Cabot
- Henry Cabot Lodge (1850–1924): U.S. senator
- George Cabot Lodge (1873–1909): poet
- Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (1902–1985): U.S. senator, U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations
- George Cabot Lodge II (b. 1927): Harvard Business School professor, 1962 U.S. Senate candidate from Massachusetts against Edward M. Kennedy
- Henry Sears Lodge (b. 1930)
- John Davis Lodge (1903–1985): 79th governor of Connecticut, U.S. ambassador
- Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. (1902–1985): U.S. senator, U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations
- George Cabot Lodge (1873–1909): poet
- Henry Cabot Lodge (1850–1924): U.S. senator
Lowell
Lyman
- Richard Lyman (1580–1640): a founder of Hartford, Connecticut; cousin of Lord Mayor of London Sir John Lyman of the Lyman Baronets of England
- Roswell Lyman: China trade merchant, had an interest in The Ann & Hope
- Theodore Lyman (1753–1839): China trade merchant, commissioned Samuel McIntire to build one of New England's finest country houses, The Vale
- Theodore Lyman II (1792–1849): brigadier general of militia, Massachusetts state representative, mayor of Boston
- Theodore Lyman III (1833–1897): natural scientist, aide-de-camp to Major General Meade during the American Civil War, and United States congressman from Massachusetts
- Theodore Lyman IV (1874–1954): director of Jefferson Physics Lab, Harvard; eponym of the Lyman series of spectral lines. The crater Lyman on the far side of the Moon is named after him, as is the Lyman Physics Building at Harvard.
- George Williams Lyman (1786–1880): developed textile mills, director of the Boston and Lowell Railroad and the Columbian Bank, president of the Massachusetts Hospital Life Insurance Company. His first wife was Elizabeth Gray Otis, the daughter of Harrison Gray Otis (U.S. senator and mayor of Boston) and Sally Foster Otis, prominent Bostonians who built a noted Federal-style mansion still standing.
- Arthur T. Lyman (1832–1915), and his sisters Sarah (Mrs. Philip H. Sears) and Lydia (Mrs. Robert Treat Paine)
- Arthur T. Lyman, Jr. (1861–1933): married Susan Cabot. Director and officer of textile manufacturing companies and the Massachusetts Life Insurance Company. Board member of the Boston Symphony Orchestra and the Waltham Hospital. He was active in politics as president of the Democratic Club of Massachusetts, chairman of the State Democratic Committee.
- Arthur T. Lyman (1832–1915), and his sisters Sarah (Mrs. Philip H. Sears) and Lydia (Mrs. Robert Treat Paine)
Minot
- Charles Sedgwick Minot (1852–1914): anatomist
- George Richards Minot (1885–1950): winner of the Nobel Prize in Medicine
- Henry Davis Minot (1859–1890): ornithologist
- Susan Minot (b. 1956): author
Norcross
Norcross family, original settlers of Watertown, Massachusetts
- Otis Norcross (1811–1882): mayor of Boston
- Eleanor Norcross (1854–1923): artist
Otis
- James Otis, Jr. (1725–1783): revolutionary
- Mercy Otis Warren (1728–1814): playwright, revolutionary
- Samuel Allyne Otis (1740–1814): politician
- Harrison Gray Otis (1765–1848): U.S. senator, mayor of Boston
Parkman
Parkman family
- Samuel Parkman (1751–1824): investor
- George Parkman (1790–1849): philanthropist, victim of a highly publicized murder
- Francis Parkman, Jr. (1823–1893): historian
Peabody
- Catherine Endicott Peabody (1808–1833)
- Elizabeth Palmer Peabody (1804–1894): American educator who opened the first English-language kindergarten in the United States
- Endicott Peabody (1857–1944): Episcopal priest and founder of the Groton School for Boys
- Endicott "Chubb" Peabody (1920–1997): governor of Massachusetts
- George Peabody (1795–1869): entrepreneur and philanthropist who founded the House of Morgan[23] and the Peabody Institute
- Joseph Peabody (1757–1844): merchant, shipowner, and philanthropist whose company sailed clipper ships in the Old China Trade from its base in Salem, Massachusetts
- Mary Tyler Peabody Mann (1806–1887): American author
- Nathaniel Peabody (1774–1855)
- Richard R. Peabody (1892–1936): author of The Common Sense of Drinking, a major influence on Alcoholics Anonymous founder Bill Wilson
- Sophia Amelia Peabody Hawthorne (1809–1871): painter, illustrator, and wife of American author Nathaniel Hawthorne
Perkins
- James Perkins (1761–1822): founder of the Boston Athenaeum, pioneer of the China trade, merchant, philanthropist
- Thomas Handasyd Perkins (1764–1854): merchant, philanthropist
- Charles Perkins (1823–1886): art historian, philanthropist, founder of the Museum of Fine Arts
- Edward Perkins (1856–1905): constitutional lawyer
- Maxwell Perkins (1884–1947): literary editor of Hemingway, Faulkner, Fitzgerald
Phillips
- Samuel Phillips, Jr. (1752–1802): politician, founder of Phillips Academy
- John Phillips (1719–1795): educator, founder of Phillips Exeter Academy
- Wendell Phillips (1811–1884): abolitionist
Putnam
- James Putnam (1725–1789): last attorney general in Massachusetts before American Revolution; judge and politician in New Brunswick
- James Putnam (1756–1838): Canadian politician
- Israel Putnam (1718–1790): American army general during the Revolutionary War
- William Lowell Putnam (1861–1924) and Elizabeth Lowell Putnam
- George P. Putnam (1887–1950): publisher, explorer, husband of Amelia Earhart
- Katherine L. Putnam (1890–1983): wife of Harvey Hollister Bundy
- Roger Lowell Putnam (1893–1972): politician, businessman
Quincy
- Edmund Quincy (1602–1636): settled in Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1633
- Josiah Quincy II (1744–1775): lawyer, revolutionary
- Josiah Quincy III (1772–1864): U.S. congressman, mayor of Boston, president of Harvard
- Dorothy Quincy Hancock: wife of John Hancock
- Abigail Smith Adams (1744–1818): wife of John Adams
- John Quincy Adams (1767–1848): President of the United States
Rice
Rice family, originally of Sudbury, Massachusetts
- Deacon Edmund Rice (1594–1663): colonist
- Alexander Hamilton Rice (1818–1895): industrialist, mayor of Boston, governor of Massachusetts, U.S. congressman
- Alexander Hamilton Rice, Jr. (1875–1956): physician, geographer and explorer
- Americus Vespucius Rice (1835–1904): general, U.S. congressman
- Edmund Rice (1842–1906): U.S. Army general, Medal of Honor recipient
- Edmund Rice (1819–1889): U.S. congressman
- Henry Mower Rice (1816–1894): U.S. senator
- Luther Rice (1783–1836): Baptist clergyman, missionary to India
- Thomas Rice (1768–1854): U.S. congressman
- William Marsh Rice (1816–1900): businessman, founder of Rice University
- William North Rice (1845–1928): geologist, educator
- William Whitney Rice (1826–1896): U.S. congressman
- William B. Rice (1840–1909): industrialist, philanthropist
Saltonstall
- Leverett Saltonstall I (1783–1845): politician, educator
- Leverett Saltonstall (1892–1979): U.S. senator
- William L. Saltonstall (1927–2009): politician
- Philip Saltonstall Weld (1915–1984): World War II commando, environmentalist
Sargent
- Colonel Epes Sargent (1690–1762): colonel of militia before the Revolution and a justice of the general session court for more than 30 years
- Paul Dudley Sargent (1745–1828): Revolutionary War hero, one of the founding overseers of Bowdoin College
- Harrison Tweed (1885–1969): lawyer and civic leader
- Tweed Roosevelt (1942–): great-grandson of President Theodore Roosevelt
- Harrison Tweed (1885–1969): lawyer and civic leader
- John Sargent (1750–1824): Loyalist officer during the American Revolution
- Winthrop Sargent (1753–1820): patriot, governor, politician, and writer; member of the Federalist Party
- Judith Sargent Murray (1751–1820): feminist, essayist, playwright, and poet; her home is the Sargent House Museum
- Daniel Sargent, Sr. (1730–1806): merchant, owned Sargent's Wharf in Boston
- Daniel Sargent (1764–1842): merchant, politician
- Daniel Sargent Curtis (1825–1908): lawyer, banker, trustee of the BPL, owner of Palazzo Barbaro
- Henry Sargent (1770–1845): painter and military man
- Henry Winthrop Sargent (1810–1882): horticulturist and landscape gardener
- Lucius Manlius Sargent (1786–1867): author, antiquarian, and temperance advocate
- Horace Binney Sargent (1821–1908): Civil War general, politician
- John Singer Sargent (1856–1925): artist, considered the "leading portrait painter of his generation"
- Charles Sprague Sargent (1841–1927): botanist, first director of Harvard University's Arnold Arboretum
- Winthrop Sargent Gilman (1808–1884): head of the banking house of Gilman, Son & Co. in New York City
- Epes Sargent (1813–1880): editor, poet and playwright
- Francis W. Sargent (1915–1998): 64th governor of Massachusetts
- Benjamin Crowninshield Bradlee (1921–2014) (Harvard-1942): editor of The Washington Post
- Frances Sargent Osgood (1811–1850): poet, one of the most popular women writers during her time
- Anna Maria Wells (née Foster; ca. 1794–1868): early American poet and writer for children
- Daniel Sargent (1764–1842): merchant, politician
- Paul Dudley Sargent (1745–1828): Revolutionary War hero, one of the founding overseers of Bowdoin College
Sears
- Richard Sears (1610–1676): colonist
- David Sears II (1787–1871): philanthropist, merchant, landowner
- Clara Endicott Sears (1863–1960): author, philanthropist
- Mason Sears (1899–1973): politician and ambassador
- Emily Sears: wife of Henry Cabot Lodge Jr.
- John W. Sears (1930–2014): politician
Tarbox
Tarbox family
- John Tarbox (1645–1674): colonist
- John K. Tarbox (1838–1887): U.S. congressman
- Increase N. Tarbox (1815–1888): author
Thorndike
- Israel Thorndike (1755–1832): merchant, politician
- Augustus Thorndike (1896–1986): physician
- George Thorndike Angell (1823–1909): lawyer, philanthropist
Tudor
- William Tudor (1750–1819): lawyer, politician, founder of the Massachusetts Historical Society
- William Tudor (1779–1830): cofounder of the North American Review and the Boston Athenaeum
- Frederic Tudor (1783–1864): Boston's "Ice King", founder of the Tudor Ice Company
- Tasha Tudor (1915–2008): illustrator and author of children's books
Warren
- Richard Warren (1578–1628): London merchant, Mayflower passenger
- James Warren (1726–1808): Army general, paymaster of American Army, president of Massachusetts Congress
- Mercy Otis Warren (1728–1814): playwright, historian, pioneer feminist, revolutionary
- Dr. Joseph Warren (1741–1775): major-general, hero/martyr of Bunker Hill, president of Massachusetts Congress, sent Paul Revere on his famous midnight ride
- Dr. John Warren (1753–1815): founder of Harvard Medical School, surgeon at Bunker Hill, co-founder of the Massachusetts Medical Society
- Dr. John Collins Warren (1778–1856): surgeon, gave first public demonstration of surgical anesthesia, a founder of The New England Journal of Medicine, president of the American Medical Association, founding dean of Harvard Medical School, and a founder of Massachusetts General Hospital
- John Collins Warren, Jr. (1842–1947): surgeon and president of the American Surgical Association
Weld
- Thomas Weld (born c. 1600): colonist, Puritan minister
- William Gordon Weld (1775–1825): merchant
- William Fletcher Weld (1800–1881): merchant, philanthropist
- Ezra Greenleaf Weld (1801–1874): daguerreotypist
- Theodore Dwight Weld (1803–1895): abolitionist
- Stephen Minot Weld (1806–1867): politician, educator
- George Walker Weld (1840–1905): philanthropist
- Stephen Minot Weld, Jr. (1842–1920): Civil War general
- Charles Goddard Weld (1857–1911): philanthropist
- Isabel Weld Perkins (1877–1948): philanthropist
- Philip Saltonstall Weld (1915–1984): World War II commando, environmentalist
- Tuesday Weld (b. 1943): actress
- William Weld (b. 1945): governor of Massachusetts
Wigglesworth
- Michael Wigglesworth (1631–1705): colonist, clergyman
- Edward Wigglesworth (1693–1765): clergyman, educator
- Richard B. Wigglesworth (1891–1960): U.S. congressman
Winthrop
- John Winthrop (1588–1649): governor of Massachusetts Bay Colony
- Lucy Winthrop Downing, mother of diplomat Sir George Downing, 1st Baronet, founder of New York, of Downing Street, London, and ultimately of Downing College, Cambridge UK. Lucy's letter to her brother Governor Winthrop provided the impetus for the founding of Harvard College.
- John Winthrop the Younger (1606–1676): governor of Connecticut
- Fitz-John Winthrop (1637–1711): governor of Connecticut
- John Winthrop the Younger (1606–1676): governor of Connecticut
- John Winthrop: married Anne Dudley, granddaughter of Thomas Dudley
- John Winthrop (1714–1779): acting president of Harvard, pioneer of American science
- Thomas Lindall Winthrop (1760–1841): lieutenant governor of Massachusetts
- Robert Charles Winthrop (1809–1894): lawyer, politician, philanthropist
See also
- Philadelphia Main Line
- First Families of Virginia
- Colonial families of Maryland
- American gentry
- Dominant minority
- Elitism
- Golden Square Mile
- Old Philadelphians
- Preppy
- Socialite
- Upper class
- White Anglo-Saxon Protestant
- Yankee
References
- ↑ "People & Events: Boston Brahmins". PBS. PBS Online. Retrieved 29 November 2015.
- ↑ Greenwood, Andrew (11 August 2011). An Introduction to the Unitarian and Universalist Traditions, page LX. Cambridge University Press. Retrieved 27 August 2015.
- ↑ Oliver Wendell Holmes, "The Brahmin Caste of New England", The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 5, Issue 27, Chapter 1 (1860). The series of articles that this article was part of eventually became his novel Elsie Venner, and the first chapter of that novel was about the Brahmin caste.
- ↑ Andrews, Robert (ed.) (1996). Famous Lines: A Columbia Dictionary of Familiar Quotations. Columbia University Press. ISBN 0-231-10218-6. External link in
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(help) - ↑ McPhee, John. Giving Good Weight. p. 163.
- ↑ Ronald Story, Harvard and the Boston Upper Class: The Forging of an Aristocracy, 1800–1870 (1985).
- ↑ Paul Goodman, "Ethics and Enterprise: The Values of a Boston Elite, 1800–1860", American Quarterly, Sept 1966, Vol. 18 Issue 3, pp 437–451.
- ↑ Peter S. Field Ralph Waldo Emerson: The Making of a Democratic Intellectual Rowman & Littlefield, 2003. ISBN 0847688429. ISBN 978-0847688425
- ↑ Ronald Story, "Harvard Students, the Boston Elite, and the New England Preparatory System, 1800–1870", History of Education Quarterly, Fall 1975, Vol. 15 Issue 3, pp 281–298.
- ↑ Farrell, Betty (1993). Elite Families: Class and Power in Nineteenth-Century Boston. SUNY Press. ISBN 1438402325.
- ↑ Muskett, Joseph James, ed. (1900). "Appleton of New England". Suffolk Manorial Families (Exeter: William Pollard & Co) 1: 330–334. Retrieved February 20, 2014.
- ↑ Jewett, Issac Appleton (1801). Memorial of Samuel Appleton of Ipswich, Massachusetts: With Genealogical Notices of Some of His Descendants. Boston.
- ↑ Ipswich Historical Society (1906). "A Genealogy of the Ipswich Descendants of Samuel Appleton.*". Publications of the Ipswich Historical Society. Retrieved February 16, 2014.
- ↑ Quinn, Bradlee. "David Bradlee". Internet Archive. Retrieved 25 August 2012.
- ↑ Sarah Bradlee Fulton
- ↑ Quinn, Bradleeq. "Sarah Bradlee". Boston Tea Party Museum. Retrieved 25 August 2012.
- ↑ History of the Town of Hingham, Plymouth County, Massachusetts, Solomon Lincoln Jr., Caleb Gill, Jr. and Farmer and Brown, Hingham, 1827
- ↑ History of the Town of Hingham, Plymouth County, Massachusetts, Solomon Lincoln, Jr., Caleb Gill, Jr. and Farmer and Brown, Hingham, Mass., 1827
- ↑ Hall, Alexandra [2009]. The New Brahmins. Boston Magazine
- ↑ http://www.masshist.org/findingaids/doc.cfm?fa=fa0057
- ↑ Lowell, Delmar R., The Historic Genealogy of the Lowells of America from 1639 to 1899; Rutland VT, The Tuttle Company, 1899; ISBN 978-0-7884-1567-8.
- ↑ John J. Waters, The Otis Family in Provincial and Revolutionary Massachusetts (U. of North Carolina Press, 1968)
- ↑ https://www.jpmorgan.com/pages/jpmorgan/about/history/month/apr
- ↑ Robert Moody, The Saltonstall Papers, 1607–1815: Selected and Edited and with Biographies of Ten Members of the Saltonstall Family in Six Generations. Vol. 1, 1607–1789 vol 2 1791–1815 (1975).
- ↑ Malcolm Freiberg, "The Winthrops and Their Papers", Massachusetts Historical Society Proceedings, 1968, Vol. 80, pp 55–70