“Shepherd Tom” Hazard

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Thomas Robinson Hazard

Also Known As: "Shepherd Tom"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: South Kingstown, Washington County, Rhode Island, United States
Death: March 26, 1886 (89)
New York City, New York County, New York, United States
Place of Burial: Portsmouth, Newport County, Rhode Island, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of Rowland Hazard and Mary Hazard (Peace)
Husband of Frances Hazard
Father of Barclay Hazard
Brother of Isaac Peace Hazard; Rowland Gibson Hazard; Elizabeth Gibson Hazard; William Robinson Hazard; Isabella Wakefield Hazard and 3 others

Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About “Shepherd Tom” Hazard

http://www.riheritagehalloffame.org/inductees_detail.cfm?crit=det&i...

Thomas Robinson Hazard was a South Kingstown manufacturer, agriculturalist, author, and social reformer who embodied the egalitarian spirit of the pre-Civil War age of reform.

Affectionately called “Shepard Tom” because of his prize sheep herd, Hazard was a seventh generation descendant of Thomas Hazard, the progenitor of the famous Hazard clan of Rhode Island and one of the nine founders of Newport. He was also the grandson of Thomas Hazard (1720-1798), an eighteenth-century South County Quaker abolitionist called “College Tom” because of his advanced study at Yale, and the older brother of Rowland Gibson Hazard (1801-1888), a noted Peace Dale woolen manufacturer, railroad promoter, and writer on philosophical subjects.

Thomas Robinson Hazard grew wealthy as a South County sheepraiser and woolen goods magnate. By his forty-third birthday he had amassed a fortune sufficient to retire to Vaucluse, an estate in Middletown. His leisure and money also enabled him to promote various reform causes and pursue a religious passion called “modern spiritualism.”

Shepherd Tom served as vice president of the American Colonization Society, an organization to relocate freed blacks to Liberia; wrote an influential state-sponsored report in 1851 on the poor and insane that prompted several institutional reforms; led the successful 1852 fight for the abolition of capital punishment in Rhode Island; espoused women’s suffrage; worked to upgrade the public schools; undertook relief efforts to aid the Irish victims of the Great Famine; and wrote in opposition to slavery and war. In his early eighties he penned Recollections of Olden Times, a work that casts a rich afterglow on nineteenth-century life in South County while also providing genealogies of the fascinating Hazard family. The Jonny-Cake Letters, a collection of his discourses, appeared in 1882.

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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Robinson_Hazard

Thomas Robinson “Shepherd Tom” Hazard (1797–1886) was an American author, social reformer, and advocate of Modern Spiritualism.

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Thomas Robinson “Shepherd Tom” Hazard

Birth: 3 JAN 1797 in South Kingston, Rhode Island

Death: 26 MAR 1886 in New York, New York

Father: Rowland Hazard, b: 4 APR 1763 in South Kingston, RI; d. 1835, Washington Hollow, Pleasant Valley, Dutchess, New York

Mother: Mary Peace, b: March 6, 1775; d. Newport, RI, 1858

Siblings: Isaac Peace Hazard, Eliza Gibson Hazard, Rowland Gibson Hazard, William Robinson Hazard, Joseph Peace Hazard, Isabella Wakefield Hazard, Mary Peace Hazard, Anna Hazard

Married: 12 OCT 1838

Wife: Frances MINTURN, b: 1813 in Of New York, New York; d. 1854

Children

  1. Mary Robinson Hazard, b: 1839, Newport, RI; d. 1842
  2. Frances Minturn Hazard, b: 1841, Vaucluse Farm, Portsmouth, RI; d. 1877
  3. Gertrude Minturn Hazard, b: 1843, Vaucluse Farm, Portsmouth, RI; d. 1877
  4. Anna Peace Hazard, b: 1845, Vaucluse Farm, Portsmouth, RI; d. 1868
  5. Esther Robinson Hazard, b: 1848, Vaucluse Farm, Portsmouth, RI; married Edwin J. Dunning
  6. Barclay Hazard, b: 4 DEC 1852, Vaucluse Farm, Portsmouth, RI

Burial:

Vaucluse Farm, Portsmouth, RI; also known as: Rhode Island Historical Cemetery Portsmouth #27; and the Rowland Hazard Lot, Portsmouth, Newport County, Rhode Island.

HAZARD, Thomas Robinson, author, was born in South Kingston, Rhode Island, Jan. 3, 1797; son of Rowland and Mary (Peace) Hazard and a descendant in the seventh generation of Thomas Hazard, one of the original settlers and proprietors of the Island of Aquidneck, who, with Nicholas Easton and Robert Jeffries, laid out the town of Newport, Rhode Island, in 1639. He attended the Friends' boarding school at Westtown, Pennsylvania., 1809-13, and in 1813 engaged in the manufacture of cotton and woolen goods at Peace Dale, Rhode Island, succeeding his father. In 1840 he retired from business and settled at his country seat "Vaucluse," near Newport. From youth he was interested in agriculture and sheep raising, keeping large flocks of sheep which he cared for himself, thus acquiring the soubriquet "Shepherd Tom." He was conspicuous reforming the management of the poor and insane in the state of Rhode Island, inaugurated the movement that resulted in the abolition of capital punishment in that state, and was a promoter of the movement in the United States for the relief of the Irish famine and a liberal contributor to the relief fund. He was made a life director and vice-president of the African colonization society in 1840. In October, 1838, he was married to Frances, daughter of Jonas and Esther (Robinson) Minturn of New York city. She died at "Vaucluse," April 10, 1854. In 1856 he became a convert to spiritualism. His published volumes include: Facts for the laboring Man (1840); Capital Punishment (1850); Report on the Poor and Insane (1850); Handbook of the National American Party (1856); Appeal to the People of Rhode Island (1857); Ordeal of Life (1870); and Recollections of Olden Times by Shepherd Tom (1879). He died in New York City, March 26, 1886. [p.174]

Sources:

http://worldconnect.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db...

Recollections of Olden Times: Rowland Robinson of Narragansett and His Unfortunate Daughter... by Thomas Robinson Hazard

The Jonny-cake papers of "Shepherd Tom," together with Reminiscences of Narragansett schools of former days by Thomas R. (Thomas Robinson) Hazard

MyHeritage family trees - Fisher-Radloff Web Site, managed by Lavonne Fisher-Radloff

http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=105213227&ref...



Rowland Hazard (1763-1835) was the son of Thomas "College Tom" Hazard (1720-1798) and Elizabeth Robinson of South Kingstown, R.I. He entered a mercantile partnership in 1789 with his first cousin John Robinson Jr. (1767-1831) of Charleston, South Carolina. Peter Ayrault was admitted to the partnership in 1794, which then became known as Hazard, Robinson & Co. By 1796, business was being transacted under the name of Hazard & Ayrault. This partnership was dissolved around 1803. Hazard continued financing merchant voyages for most of his life, often trading with his older brother Thomas "Bedford Tom" Hazard Jr. (1758-1828). His trade was largely along the Atlantic coast and the Caribbean, with Charleston, New York and Rhode Island serving as hubs, and his cargo included everything from salt to spermaceti oil to cheese. Hazard seems to have been a substantial merchant, although not one of the largest of his day. He suffered serious financial setbacks around 1807, when several of his ships were captured by French privateers acting under the Decrees of Berlin and Milan.

           In 1802, Hazard began to invest in the textile industry, acquiring a half interest in a South Kingstown fulling mill, and in 1804 a carding machine in the same location. This was the beginning of the Narragansett Cotton Manufacturing Company. After 1810, Hazard's son Isaac P. Hazard came to play an important role in this business. In 1819, Isaac and another son, Rowland G. Hazard, took full control of this company and developed it into the Peace Dale Manufacturing Company, which became one of the dominant businesses in southern Rhode Island.
           In 1819, Hazard settled in Pleasant Valley, N.Y. as his primary residence, where he resided until his death. He continued to travel frequently to South Kingstown and Charleston for both family and business reasons. He sold his financial interest in the business to his son Isaac in 1821.
           Rowland Hazard married Mary Peace (1775-1852) in 1793. The village of Peace Dale was named in her honor. She was the daughter of merchant Isaac Peace and Elizabeth Gibson, who were both originally from Barbados, but settled in Charleston, S.C. Mary was raised in Charleston, and spent a year studying in London as a girl. Her family eventually relocated to Bristol, Pennsylvania, and the Hazards spent a great deal of time there. Mary was in Bristol almost exclusively from 1807 to 1820, helping to care for her aging father until his death. The nine children were also raised in Pennsylvania to a large extent. Mary and Rowland's children were as follows:

Isaac Peace Hazard (1794-1879), bachelor, active in mills.

Thomas Robinson "Shepherd Tom" Hazard (1797-1886), historian, spiritualist. Six children.

Elizabeth Gibson Hazard (1799-1882), spinster.

Rowland Gibson Hazard (1801-1888), two children, active in mills.

William Robinson Hazard (1803-), married, eight children

Joseph Peace Hazard (1807-1892), bachelor, spiritualist.

Isabella Wakefield Hazard (1809-1838), spinster

Mary Peace Hazard (1814-1874), spinster

Anna Hazard (1820-1905), spinster

Thomas Robinson Hazard (1797-1886) was the second son of Rowland Hazard I (1763-1835) and Mary Peace Hazard. He was raised in South Kingstown, Rhode Island, in the Quaker faith, and spent three years in a Quaker school in Westtown, Pennsylvania from 1808 to 1811. He began his adult life in the textile industry, first in his father's mill in South Kingstown, and then after 1821 on his own account. He also farmed and raised sheep, which earned him the nickname "Shepherd Tom". In 1838, he had amassed a sufficient fortune to enter a state of quasi-retirement at his estate in Portsmouth, R.I., which he titled "Vaucluse".

           In his later years, he was a frequently published author on topics as diverse as capital punishment, local history, African colonization, and sheep raising; he acted as a civic advocate for the poor and mentally ill. Among his books were a collection of political essays titled Facts for the Laboring Man by a Laboring Man (1840); A Family Medical Instructor: Civil and Religious Persecution in the State of New York (1876); and a collection of South Kingstown folklore entitled The Jonny-Cake Papers (1888, reprinted 1915). In 1858, he became heavily involved in the defense of a poor distant cousin, Charles T. Hazard, who was being sued in a complex land case by the wealthy Robert Hale Ives; this case was summarized by Shepherd Tom in Extraordinary Legislative and Judicial, Official, and Professional Proceedings in Rhode Island in the Nineteenth Century, Fished from Dark Waters (1865). 
           Even more than his brothers Rowland and Joseph, his primary interest was the Spiritualist movement. After the death of his wife, he wrote countless newspaper articles on the subject, and held frequent seances at Vaucluse. In his published genealogy, he wrote of himself that he "has been an earnest worker in the cause of 'Modern Spiritualism' since the year 1856, and whatever may be his merits or demerits otherwise, he has no higher ambition than that his name should be handed down to the coming generations associated with this fact alone." (Recollections of Olden Times, p. 192). He died in New York City in 1886.
           Hazard married Frances Minturn (1812-1854), daughter of Jonas Minturn of New York, in 1838. They had five daughters (all predeceased Hazard) and one son:

1) Mary Robinson Hazard (1839-1842)

2) Frances Minturn "Fanny" Hazard (1841-1877)

3) Gertrude Minturn Hazard (1843-1877)

4) Anna Peace Hazard (1845-1868)

5) Esther Robinson Hazard (1848-1880), m. Edwin Dunning, d. Santa Barbara, Cal.

6) Barclay Hazard (1852-1938), m. Alida Blake

Bibliography:

Hazard, Rowland G. II. Introductory sketch in Thomas R. Hazard's The Jonny-Cake Papers of "Shepherd Tom"... (Boston: Reprint, 1915)

Hazard, Thomas R. Recollections of Olden Times: Rowland Robinson of Narragansett and his Unfortunate Daughter; with Genealogies of the Robinson and Hazard Families of Rhode Island (Newport: 1879).

HAZARD, Thomas Robinson, author, born in South Kingston, Rhode Island, in 1784; died in New York in March, 1876. He was educated at, the Friends' school in Westtown, Chester County, Pennsylvania, and subsequently engaged in farming, and assisted his father in the woollen business. He then established a woollen mill at Peacedale, Rhode Island, and acquired a fortune. In 1836 he purchased an estate at Vaucluse, Rhode Island, and in 1840 retired from his manufacturing business. He caused many reforms to be introduced in the management of insane asylums and poor-houses in Rhode Island. He was, for years preceding his death, an enthusiastic spiritualist, and wrote much in support of their views. He is the author of " Facts for the Laboring Man" (1840): " Capital Punishment" (18,50); "Report on the Poor and Insane " (1850); " Handbook of the National American Party" (1856): " Appeal to the People of Rhode Island" (1857); and " Ordeal of Life" (Boston, 1870).--His brother, Rowland Gibson, author, born in South Kingston, Rhode Island, 9 October, 1801. He has been engaged from his youth in mercantile. The and manufacturing pursuits at Peacedale, Rhode Island, where he now (1887) resides, and has accumulated a fortune. While in New Orleans in 1841-'2, though threatened with lynching, he obtained with great effort the release of large numbers of free negroes, who belonged to ships from the north, and who had been placed in the chain-gang. He was a member of the Rhode Island legislature in 1851-'2 and 1854-'5, and was in the state serrate in 1566-'7. Brown gave him the degree of A. M. in 1845. and that of LL. D. in 1869. He is the author of "Language. its Connection with the Constitution and Prospects of Man," under the pen-name of " Heteroscian " (Providence. 1836); " Lectures on the Adaptation of the Universe to the Cultivation of the Nind" (1840);" Lecture on the Causes of the Decline of Political and National Morality" (1841); " Essay on the Philosophical Character of Channing" (1844);" Essay on the Duty of Individuals to support Science and Literature" (1855), "Essays on the Resources of the United States " (1864); " Freedom of the Mind in Willing" (New York, 1864); "Essays on Finance and Hours of Labor" (1868); and two letters addressed to John Stuart Mill on "Causation and Freedom in Willing " (London and Boston, 1869).

Robinson, Caroline E. The Hazard Family of Rhode Island (Boston: 1895), 121

Thomas Robinson Hazard - Bayles1

THOMAS ROBINSON HAZARD - A history of Newport county, or, indeed, of the state of Rhode Island, would be incomplete without at least a slight sketch of the life and achievements of Thomas Robinson Hazard, who, for nearly half a century, and up to the time of his death in 1886, was a resident of the town of Portsmouth.

Mr. Hazard was a lineal descendent of Thomas Hazard, who settled in the same town about the year 1638, and who was one of the original incorporators of the town of Newport. Born of Quaker ancestry, at Tower hill is South Kingstown, Washington County, Rhode Island , January 3d, 1797, he was trained, from early years, to the business of woolen manufacturing, which his father had established at Peace dale in the same town, and , at the age of sixteen, he engaged in the same business on his own account. In this he continued, through all the vicissitudes incident to the establishment of an infant industry on a firm basis, until 1842, when, having a few years before purchased the fine old country seat called "Vaucluse," in the town of Portsmouth, he retired from active business, and devoted much of his time to agricultural pursuits, of which he had always been extremely fond.

Though never holding political office of any kind, Mr. Hazard always took a deep interest in every movement in the direction of reform and improvement of the conditions of life, and was ever ready to use his pen, without fear or favor, in aid of any cause which he believed to be just. He was the first in the state to establish an evening school, in 1821, in his factory, and he built, largely at his own expense, in Portsmouth, the first school house on the improved plan in any country town in Rhode Island. He also joined in writing the call for the first large meeting ever held in behalf of educational interests in Providence or the state, at which the Rhode Island Institute of Instruction was organized. He visited every public poorhouse in the state, except on Block Island, made a full report of their condition to the general assembly, and succeeded in bringing about a thorough reform in their management. He began an agitation in behalf of the insane poor, and did not abandon the cause until after the Butler hospital was in successful operation. It was through his application to the general assembly that fixed appropriations were made for the maintenance of the insane, and for the education of the deaf and dumb and the blind. It was through his untiring efforts, and the influence of a report compiled and written by him, that the legislature abolished capital punishment in Rhode Island by a majority of four in the senate, and afterward by more than two to one in the house.

Mr. Hazard also took an active interest in the work of the African Colonization Society, and always maintained that, if the aims of this organization had been adequately aided by the general government, the great question of slavery would in all probability have been settled without bloodshed. In politics he was an ardent whig and an earnest supporter of Henry Clay and his American system of protection to home industry; and in the wisdom and beneficence of this principal he was, to the day of his death, an unfaltering believer. In aid of the whig campaign of 1840 he wrote and published in the Newport papers of the time a series of articles entitled, "Facts for the Laboring Man," which the New York Courier and Enquirer, then the recognized organ of commercial and financial interests, referred to as being "the best exposition of the financial policy of the present (Van Buren) administration that has appeared."

During the later years of his life Mr. hazard spent much of his time in compiling a very thorough genealogical record of the Hazard and Robinson families, prefaced by many interesting recollections of olden times and he also published in the newspapers a series of articles entitled, "Jonny Cake Papers," relating to the early customs and traditions of the state. These were afterward printed in book form, and together with his volume of "Miscellaneous Essays and Letters," made a valuable contribution to the historical literature of his state and time.

Transcription (C) 2004, William Saslow from: [1] The History of Newport County, Rhode Island, Richard M. Bayles, 1888, New York, E. Preston & Co., pp 693-695

Introduction and biographical sketch of Thomas R. (Shepherd Tom) Hazard from his "The Jonny Cake Papers" by his grandnephew Roland G. Hazard, From the Reprinted Edition of 1915

Thomas Robinson Hazard, of the seventh generation of Hazards in Rhode Island, Shepherd Tom for short, was born on the 3rd of January, 1797, in the house of his grandfather, "College Tom," standing then on the east slope of Tower Hill in Narragansett. The site can still be traced, but hardly one stone of the foundation remains upon another. He died in New York, March 26, 1886.

During his long life of more than eighty-nine years, he was a prolific writer, and yet literature was not his profession. He was by choice a shepherd, not only of sheep, but a shepherd of men. Of a generous, sympathetic nature, he was quick to espouse the cause of the weak and downtrodden. He truly loved his neighbor as himself, and misfortune was ever the key to his heart. Thoroughly democratic in every fibre, he only required to be convinced of the justice of a cause to become its vigorous supporter. For the weak and defenseless he would go to any length. He was often called Quixotic, and he was doubtless somewhat hasty at times; especially is this true of his more youthful jousts.

In his riper manhood, his attention was called to the conditions of the insane poor, and in a report upon that subject made to the legislature in 1851, he forcibly depicted the desperate case of the poor in the State of Rhode Island. He supplemented by personal visits a searching series of questions addressed to all the keepers of the poor in the state, and described what he saw in vivid terms. The considerable sensation aroused resulted in a movement to improve the condition of the poor throughout the state, wherever found. upon this report depends much of the serious consideration which his fellow citizens have always accorded to the memory of Shepherd Tom.

Descended from "a self-willed race of independent thinkers," he was himself a type specimen of the Snip Breed.

Mr. Hazard made a deep impression on most people who met him, and he was my favorite among my granduncles. In person he favored the men of his race. Six feet in his stocking feet, heavily built, but not portly, he moved quietly, as is the wont of very strong men. While not handsome, he was distinguished-looking, with thick, close, curly, nut-brown hair of a silky fineness. Blue eyes, which pity softened and the recital of the wrongs of others made steely hard, were set deep under overhanging brows. As a man of eighty, he wore a beard, much grizzled, and I remember well his chuckling laugh, constrained, almost throttled, it seemed, by a set of false teeth which he feared to lose by too hearty abandon. Yet it was a laugh full of real humor, and I have often seen him forced to pause in the middle of an amusing situation , shaking with laughter and speechless, so keen was his enjoyment of the picture conjured up by a memory as vivid as it was accurate. His hands, though large and bony, were full of character, and his dry palm and fingers hat that silky texture usually found only in the very young and the old. One could easily imagine such hands tenderly caring for the stray lambs of his flock.

His manner of speech was somewhat blurred; it was not always easy to understand him, but no doubt this was more noticeable as an old man, on account of the loose set of teeth already mentioned. A story occurs to me, however, which shows that Thomas, as well as his brothers, Isaac and Roland, had a fashion of rapid, indistinct speech. A stranger, noticing the three tall, fine-looking young men, absorbed in debating a business matter asked, "What language are they talking?"

He was remarkably self-controlled, except in argument, when I used to fear that personal violence might result. But under personal affliction, and I have often seen him so, he was not only wonderfully brave, but had a forced cheerfulness of manner, most pathetic to see, for no one could doubt a heart so tender must be bleeding. Thus, as an old man, hale and hearty, he stands for the chivalrous, for the clean mind, the pure heart, prompt to denounce evil, ready to acclaim the good, fonder, however, of denunciation.

It seems hardly in character that one who could do such serious work as that for the poor and insane should also maintain in New York a Stanhope gig, a two-wheeled affair, for his personal use when visiting that city. He was wont to stop at Bunker's Hotel, then a fashionable resort in Rector Street, and his occasional visits are remembered by a few as those of a bright and active-minded man. His voyage to England and the continental countries, about 1831, was seldom spoken of by himself, although Americans who crossed the ocean in the ships of that day were few in number, and showed some enterprise.

He was a master hand at controversy, as is attested by a long list of pamphlets issued by him in self-defense or to attack others. His most famous case excited intense feeling in the state, and led to impeachment proceedings against a Chief Justice. He was always a champion of those whom he considered in need of his assistance.

He was bred in the strictest school of the Quakers' doctrine, and himself used the plain language so long as he lived. And yet he quotes three articles of faith taught "in nearly every well-ordered family in Narragansett" when he was a child: First, that ye love one another and your neighbor as yourselves. Second, that ye hate the Puritans of Massachusetts with a perfect hatred. Third, that ye hold the Presbyterians of Connecticut in like contempt. His early schooling was supplemented by three years (August, 1808-October 16, 1811) at Westtown school near Philadelphia, then as now under Quaker control.

There has recently come into my hands a little chapbook which doubtless played its part in my Uncle Tom's early education. The book is full of maxims of the sort which he practiced all his life. His standards were high; and he was scrupulously truthful in all important matters. One of the maxims in this chapbook reads: "There are lying looks as well as lying words, and even a lying silence." This gem condensed from "Mrs. Opie on Lying," would have appealed to him strongly.

At fifteen he left school and returned to Narragansett, where he soon became deeply interested in sheep. By strenuous efforts he managed to bring a part of his flock through the heavy snows of the severe winters, but there is no hint in his memoirs that he ever led the piping shepherd's life of indolence. In fact, there was not a lazy bone in him. He seems to have been full of vigor, energetic beyond the ordinary.

In one of Shepherd Tom's pamphlets, entitled "Cruelty to Dumb Animals," written in 1875, he blames himself with characteristic frankness, "being engaged in an arduous branch of business, and possessed of a strong constitution, as well as an ardent energetic and hasty temperament myself, I was too apt to disregard the physical weaknesses and inability of others, whether man or beast."

Not long after his return to his father's house, he began to assist in the primitive manufacturing of that early day. The woolen mills at Peace Dale had been at work for ten years when our Thomas Hazard left his schooling, and the part he was given was to ride forth to leave rolls of carded wool with spinners who spun on hand wheels in their own houses. At the same time he took the yarn spun since his last visit, carrying it upon his pommel, to be woven in the mill. In this way he came to know the whole countryside, as well as all the people in it; his minute knowledge of tradition and of the affairs of his neighbors shows clearly in his later literary years.

In 1821 he bought ten acres of land in Rocky Brook from Abigail Rodman, widow of Robert Rodman, and, in the same year, he also bought of Freeman P. Watson the right to erect a dam and flow another ten acres. That same year he build the dam and the wooden mill to house one set of woolen machinery. In 1822 he bought from his father, Rowland Hazard, seventy acres adjoining his previous purchase from Abigail Rodman. At the end of seventeen years he was able to retire from business, and did so.

Of the one absorbing romance in his life, his courtship and marriage of the famous beauty, Frances Minturn, in 1838; of his business successes, through which he gained a modest competence at an early age (43); of his settlement at the beautiful Vaucluse near Newport; of his life there, and death of his adored wife and five beautiful daughters, who followed each other in swift succession, slight record remains.

With his marriage began his career of public service. These sixteen years of married life must have been his happiest years. As the children grew up at Vaucluse, it was the usual thing for Shepherd Tom to drive in to Meeting on First Days, whither his handsome span of buckskin horses used to convey the delightful daughters. Afterwards girl friends would be taken back to Vaucluse for the night, a treat fondly remembered by some still living.

The death of Shepherd Tom's wife was the pivotal event in his life. It was a blow so cruel and crushing, and it fell upon a nature so gentle and loving, that for years it changed his whole outlook. His mental vision became suddenly astigmatic.

Personally, I saw much of my uncle's grief, for I attended the last rites of at least three of my cousins, and helped to lay them in the family burial ground on the farm at Vaucluse, after the old Rhode Island custom. There was a grim pathos about these occasions which impressed me mightily. Uncle Thomas would often chide those who were in open grief, if he noticed red eyes or swollen, by saying something of that happy state to which death had called his child, and urging us to be more cheerful. So he sought to hide his own grief. So clear was his belief in the future life that it is quite possible he really felt fewer pangs than the ordinary selfish nature, which grieves for the loss of those who minister to us. His was surely an unselfish soul.

So strong was his dread of cant, that he never, so far as I can remember, had any clergy in attendance, but chose rather to have a prayer put up by one of his own blood. Neither did he ever permit a paid undertaker to be in charge.

He turned to Spiritualism for comfort when his wife died, and records his devotion to that cult, saying that he "has no higher ambition than that his name should be handed down to the coming generations" as a worker in the cause of Spiritualism.

To this sore and wounded soul came the plundering host of so-called "Spirit mediums," whose liberal patron he became. His advocacy of this cult was thoroughly sincere, as one would expect. Whatever he did, he did with all his might. His writings enumerate the names of all the well-known and many obscure mediums of his time. He quarreled on the subject with George William Curtis. He believed in Henry Slade and his magic slate writing, Mrs. Cushman, one Gordan, Charles H. Foster, Mrs. Seaver, Mrs. Mary Andrews of Moravia, - but why record the names long since forgotten? He honored them all as honest men and women. He could not think them other than himself. Once, while vexed at my persistent doubt, he handed me one-half of a stage moustache, such as actors often use, saying he had it from the spirit of an Indian who "materialized" for him at a recent "séance." He had told this Indian spirit that he never had seen him wear a moustache before; on which the brazen impersonator had pulled off this half and handed it to him , saying "There's a nut for you to crack." Even this did not shake his faith a particle.

Mr. Hazard was proud of his ancestry, and became a genealogist of sorts, printing a "Genealogy of the Family of Hazard or Hassard" in connection with his delightful "Recollections of Olden Times," published at Newport in 1879. Genealogies of the Robinson and Sweet families also appeared in this collection.

It is noteworthy that the quaint reminiscences recorded in the "Jonny-Cake Papers" hark back to the early days in Narragansett. Hardly any mention is made of the school at Westtown, Pennsylvania, where he was given all the schooling he ever had. His brief, but strenuous, business life gave him personal acquaintance with the group of worthies on Little Rest Hill.

A series of papers afterward collected under the title "A Constitutional Manual; Negro Slavery and the Constitution," published two years after his wife's death (1856), takes as model Washington's Farewell Address. It is an impassioned plea for the preservation of the Union, and clearly points out in prophetic vein the inevitable evils of the Reconstruction period. He undertakes to set out "an authentic narrative of outrages, wrongs, and cruelties equally numerous and atrocious as those detailed in 'Uncle Tom's Cabin' out of the abuses occurring within the last thirty years in the asylums and poorhouses in Rhode Island alone." Throughout this pamphlet runs a strong religious tone, but Jesuits and their ways are fiercely denounced. In his later writings denunciation takes full possession, and supplants religion in his mind; in fact it became a religion, negative yet positive.

The "Providence Journal" in 1878 said of him that he had rendered four distinguished services. First, his labors in behalf of the poor and insane. Second, his successful campaign against capital punishment. Third, his earnest advocacy and munificent support of African Colonization. Fourth, his originating the movement in this country to relieve the Irish famine, concluding, "No one who knows him doubts the earnestness of his convictions, or the purity of his personal character, and he carries his years as lightly as a man of fifty."

As Shepherd Tom lay a dying, he said, "I fear I'm better, and am sorry, for I'm eager to begin the new life."

So much may be said, yet there remains much more which must be left unsaid. Upon the back of the portrait of himself given me at the time of writing the "Jonny-Cake Papers," he wrote in his clear, rugged hand "To my dear Cousin," A Shakespearean use of the term, still common among Friends.

As such I delight to think of him, and I expect to meet him on that further shore. If he chides me gently for this writing, as is not unlikely, I shall tell him that I have tried to do a filial duty. As he himself never shrank from duty, he will forgive tis faulty sketch, and I trust his kinsfolk will be equally kind.

It is not unlikely that Shepherd Tom would be not only surprised but perhaps a little chagrined to think that the republication of his "Jonny-Cake Papers" has furnished the moving cause for this brief note upon his life and writings, for it is distinctly remembered that he regarded them as a mere amusement.

The origin of these papers is just what it appears to be from the quotation taken from the Providence Journal at the head of the "first baking." The Journal's challenge, evidently issued in friendly spirit, happened to fall under his eye at the psychological moment.

The first paper was so favorably commented upon, and so many of his friends urged him to finish what he had begun, that he was easily led on through the whole series, which appeared at somewhat irregular intervals through a period of about two years. The whimsical style adopted naturally led along a path whose branches are legion. To some this is undoubtedly rather an annoyance than otherwise, but the general favor with which the papers were received made him one of the popular authors of the moment.

The original form in which these papers were reprinted was in two pamphlets, twelve "bakings" in the first, and fourteen with a supplement in the second. There were two editions in this early reprint, both published by the indefatigable Sidney S. Rider of Providence. Both have been out of print for many years.

In arranging the present republication, the supplement is placed first as an introduction to the main body of the book. Dealing as it does with the Narragansett schools, it seems to deserve to lead. Moreover, it is one of the most admired specimens of Shepherd Tom's discursive style.

Special thanks are due to Mrs. Hiram F. Hunt for the loan of the portrait of the Witch, Sylvia Tory, by Mrs. Samuel Rodman of Rocky Brook, from which the drawing was made.

To Thomas G. Hazard, Jr., also, thanks are rendered, as without his special knowledge and careful work the map presented with this edition could not have been drawn. Acknowledgments are due to Mr. Dexter W. Hoxie, who has read the proofs with the greatest care and intelligence, and to Miss Edith Carpenter, to whom the completeness of the Index is largely due.

ROWLAND GIBSON HAZARD Of the Ninth Generation in Peace Dale

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“Shepherd Tom” Hazard's Timeline

1797
January 3, 1797
South Kingstown, Washington County, Rhode Island, United States
1852
1852
1886
March 26, 1886
Age 89
New York City, New York County, New York, United States
????
Rowland Hazard Lot, Portsmouth, Newport County, Rhode Island, United States