George W. Dole Explained

Birth Date:February 1800
Birth Place:Troy, New York
Death Date:April 13, 1860 (age 60)
Office:Postmaster of Chicago
Order:7th
Term Start:September 25, 1850
Term End:March 1853
Predecessor:Richard L. Wilson
Successor:Isaac Cook
President:Millard Fillmore
Office2:Chicago Alderman from the 6th ward
Term Start2:1842
Term End2:1844
Alongside2:George O. Bryan (1842–43)
J. Marback (1843–44)
Predecessor2:George F. Foster/ James J.H. Howe
Successor2:Michael Diversey/ Buckner Stith Morris
Term Start3:1838
Term End3:1839
Alongside3:Grant Goodrich
Predecessor3:Samuel Jackson/ Bernard Ward
Successor3:John H. Kinzie/ Buckner Stith Morris
Office4:Chicago City Treasurer
Term Start4:1839
Term End4:1840
Predecessor4:Hiram Pearson
Successor4:N.H. Bolles
Office5:Treasurer of the Chicago Village Board of Trustees
Term Start5:September 3, 1833
Term End5:1834
Predecessor5:village newly-incorporated
Office6:Member of the Chicago Village Board of Trustees
Term Start6:August 10, 1833
Term End6:1834
Predecessor6:village newly-incorporated
Party:Whig
Republican
Profession:Businessman

George W. Dole (February 1800 – April 13, 1860) was a businessman and early settler of Chicago. He has been dubbed Chicago's "father of the provisions, shipping and elevator business.[1] Dole opened Chicago's first grocery store and started the city's meatpacking industry. He also ran a trading house that was a charter member of the Chicago Board of Trade. A member of the Whig and later Republican parties, Dole also served as the postmaster of Chicago, a member of the Chicago Common Council (city council), a member of the Chicago Board of Water Commissioners, a town trustee of Chicago, and ran as the Whig Party nominee for mayor of Chicago in the March 1844 Chicago mayoral election.

Early life

George Washington Dole was born in Troy, New York. He was the son of James Dole, who had fought in the American Revolutionary War. Dole was raised in Troy. He attended school and he lived with his parents until he turned 18, at which time traveled out west.[2]

After traveling by public conveyances to Auburn, New York, Dole went by foot to Buffalo, New York. With meager means but a strong work ethic, Dole worked his passage on a schooner to Detroit, Michigan. He then traveled to Pontiac, Michigan (at the time a frontier trading post where a brother of his resided). He found little work in Pontiac except for employment on a monthly basis at a farm nearby. He lived in Pontiac for several years. With the labor combined with the weather of Pontiac proving harmful to his health, he returned to Detroit where he began working for the general trader Oliver Newberry. Newberry soon trusted Dole enough to send him to run one of his outpost stores at a settlement further inland.[2]

Life and career in Chicago

Newberry, impressed with Dole, sent him to Chicago to run the Sutler's store at Fort Dearborn.[2] Dole arrived at the settlement, as it was at the time—having a population of fewer than two hundred people—in 1831, the same year that Cook County, Illinois was established,[3] settling at Wolf Point. He and fellow-Wolf Point resident, R. A. Kinzie, were the only two merchants in the city at this time.[4]

In Chicago, Dole was a member of the Episcopal Church of the United States, attending St James church.[2] [5]

Business

Dole opened the first grocery store in Chicago. It was located at Dearborn Street and Water Street. This area would later become the site of the city's wholesale market.[1] Dole created the first slaughterhouse in Chicago, processing 150 head a day by 1833. That year Newberry would send beef and hides produced by Dole to eastern US markets, Chicago's first such shipment.[6] From this beginning, Dole is credited with the establishment of the meat packing industry in Chicago, which would later grow into a long-term major industry for the city.[1] [7] Dole also, in partnership with John H. Kinzie, built the city's first steamboat.

Newberry would, in 1835, make Dole a partner of his trading house, which was renamed Newberry & Dole.[2] After Newberry retired, Dole partnered with his nephews George F. Rumsey and Julian Sidney Rumsey to reform the house as Dole, Rumsey & Co. The company was one of the charter members of the Chicago Board of Trade. This partnership continued for six years until Dole retired on January 1, 1853. The house was then known as Rumsey Bros & Co., until it ceased operations in 1891.[3] [8] [9]

Public offices and community roles

Rumsey was one of the incorporators of Chicago when it became a town on August 5, 1833.[3] Five days later, Dole was elected to the town's inaugural board of Trustees along with Madore B. Beaubien, E. S. Kimberly, John Miller, and Thomas Jefferson Vance Owen.[10] On September 3, 1833, Rumsey was appointed the board's inaugural treasurer.[11] Dole also served on the Chicago Board of Water Commissioners.[2] He was an elected trustee of the Chicago Orphan Asylum.[12]

Dole was the director of the first state bank of Illinois and helped to organize the Chicago Board of Trade. He served as the postmaster of Chicago in the early 1850s.[2]

In politics

Dole was a member of the Whig Party,[13] and later the Republican Party.[2] From 1838–1839 and again from 1842–1844, he was a member of the Chicago Common Council (as the city council was then-known), representing the 6th ward.[14] From 1839 through 1840 he was the city treasurer of Chicago.[14]

Dole was the unsuccessful Whig nominee in the March 1844 Chicago mayoral election, losing very narrowly. The election result was voided by the Chicago Common Council, which claimed that there had been electoral fraud by the Democratic Party.[15] [16] Dole did not run in the subsequent April do-over election, however.[17] Dole was an early and active member of the free Kansas movement, and became the treasurer of a national committee for the cause.[2] Millard Fillmore appointed Dole as postmaster of Chicago during his presidency.[2] [18]

Later life and death

Near the end of his life, Dole lost the significant sum of $80,000 by investing in a real estate deal that a friend had assured him would be a guaranteed success for him, greatly diminishing his personal financial wealth.[2]

He died at the age of 60 on April 13, 1860, at his home.[2]

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. News: Kraig . Bruce . Glazing Through Chicago Food History . Chicago Tribune . 1 August 2022 . July 16, 1997. October 17, 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20211017054734/https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct-xpm-1997-07-16-9707220045-story.html.
  2. News: Death of George W. Dole . Chicago Tribune . 1 August 2022 . 1 . 14 April 1860.
  3. News: Julian S. Rumsey . Chicago Tribune . 1 August 2022 . en . subscription . April 21, 1886.
  4. News: The Commerce of Chicago . Chicago Tribune . 1 August 2022 . en . subscription . January 29, 1864.
  5. Book: Keating . Ann Durkin . The world of Juliette Kinzie: Chicago before the fire . 2019 . University of Chicago Press . Chicago . 9780226664668 . 48.
  6. Book: Rosenberg . Chaim M. . Yankee colonies across America: Cities upon the hills . 2015 . Lexington Books . Lanham, MD, USA . 9781498519847 . 66.
  7. News: Chicago is Nearing the Century Mark of its Existence . The Inter Ocean (Chicago) . 1 August 2022 . en . subscription . December 28, 1902.
  8. News: Failure of Rumsey Bros. & Co. . Chicago Tribune . 1 August 2022 . en . subscription . 1 Sep 1891.
  9. News: Julian S. Rumsey . Chicago Tribune . 1 August 2022 . en . subscription . April 21, 1886.
  10. News: History of the Gold Coast -IX . Chicago Tribune . Newspapers.com . 1 August 2022 . en . subscription . July 7, 1942.
  11. News: Made Chicago into a City . The Chicago Chronicle . 1 August 2022 . en . subscription . April 3, 1897.
  12. News: Chicago Orphan Asylum . Chicago Tribune . en . subscription . February 4, 1858.
  13. Encyclopedia: Whigs . Encyclopedia of Chicago History . 1 August 2022.
  14. Web site: Centennial List of Mayors, City Clerks, City Attorneys, City Treasurers, and Aldermen, elected by the people of the city of Chicago, from the incorporation of the city on March 4, 1837 to March 4, 1937, arranged in alphabetical order, showing the years during which each official held office. . December 24, 2018 . https://web.archive.org/web/20180904052355/http://chsmedia.org/media/fa/fa/LIB/AldermansList.htm . September 4, 2018 . dead .
  15. Book: Einhorn . Robin L. . Property Rules: Political Economy in Chicago, 1833-1872 . University of Chicago Press . Chicago . 34–36 . 2001.
  16. Web site: Garrett . Augustus . Augustus Garrett . Inaugural Address of Mayor Augustus Garrett . Chicago Public Library . March 7, 1844 . April 15, 2014.
  17. Encyclopedia: Chicago Mayors, 1837-2007 . Encyclopedia of Chicago History . 2 January 2021.
  18. News: Miller . Lucy Key . From Views & Profiles . Chicago Tribune . 1 August 2022 . en . subscription . March 4, 1957.