Background on Richards Family
A prosperous farmer in the southern reaches of Massachusetts Bay Colony, James Richards was born on June 2, 1658, and never ventured far from his from his home in Weymouth or the adjoining town of Braintree. The son of William Richards and his wife Grace Shaw, and a member of the third generation of Richards in the new world, James was characteristically diverse in his economic activities, raising livestock (sheep and pigs), harvesting salt grass, making salt, and raising crops including rye, corn, and barley, which he malted, presumably for the production of beer. Although most of his transactions were local, he shipped as far away as Charlestown and Barnstable.
Richards married Ruth Bicknell (1660-1728) in 1680, and raised a family of three, including son Benjamin (1683-1733) and daughters Ruth (1685-1766) and Elizabeth (1690-1746). He died on Mar. 8, 1711, leaving his house and property largely to his wife and son, and 100 pounds to his daughter Ruth Lovell.
Scope of collection
The Richards family ledgers include a daybook from James Richards kept between 1692-1710 and an account book from his great grandson Jacob Richards kept a century later, along with loose receipts from generations of Richards in between. The volume associated with James Richards records sales of goods produced on his Weymouth farm, including barley, rye, "Indian corn," salt, mutton and lamb, pork, and eggs, along with occasional records of the sale of goods such as shingles, "board nails," clapboards, molasses and sugar, lamp oil, tobacco, and cloth. The sparser records from Jacob Richards include accounts that include the sale of cider; cord wood; pine, oak, and maple boards; and shoes.
A UMass Press description of the published version of James Richards account book notes that "reveals significant social details of Richards and his household, including his diverse trading partners, his extensive family connections, an Indian slave girl, and a well-dressed female servant."
Inventory
Bound in a crude limp vellum binding, the Richards daybook is a beautiful example of a ledger containing transactions associated with a prosperous farm in colonial Massachusetts at the turn of the eighteenth century. The volume includes over 5000 entries extending nearly to the date of Richards death in March 1710/11.
Jacob Richards Account book
1713-1818
Bound in marbled paper, the account book was kept by Jacob Richards (a great-grandson of James and son of another James Richards), primarily between 1795 and 1801. The volume begins with two pages of earlier and essentially unrelated entries (1734-1748), and a series of receipts were laid in, issued to the elder James Richards' son Benjamin and Benjamin's grandson Nathaniel Richards between 1713 and 1818.
Administrative information
Search terms
Subjects
- Agriculture--Massachusetts--Weymouth
- Farmers--Massachusetts--Weymouth
- Weymouth (Mass.)--Economic conditions--17th century
- Weymouth (Mass.)--Economic conditions--18th century
Contributors
- Richards Family [main entry]
- Richards, James, 1658-1711
- Richards, Jacob, 1778-
Link to similar SCUA collections