Ohio History Journal

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A JOURNEY FROM BALTIMORE TO LOUISVILLE IN

A JOURNEY FROM BALTIMORE TO LOUISVILLE IN

1816:  DIARY OF WILLIAM NEWTON MERCER

 

Edited by EDWIN ADAMS DAVIS and JOHN C. L. ANDREASSEN

 

Introduction.

William Newton Mercer, surgeon and planter, banker and

philanthropist, Unionist and Confederate, was one of the most

noted citizens of middle nineteenth century New Orleans. He

was born in Cecil County, Maryland, in 1792,  scion of a well

known family, and after being educated in medicine under Dr.

Benjamin Rush at the University of Pennsylvania, entered the

army as an assistant surgeon just prior to the War of 1812.1 He

saw honorable service at Bladensburg2 and at the close of the con-

flict was ordered to New Orleans where he became post surgeon.

He kept a diary of his journey from Baltimore to the "Crescent

City" and it is that portion of the diary from Baltimore to Louis-

ville which is here published.3  He was soon transferred to Nat-

chez, Mississippi, where he shortly resigned from the army to

enter private practice. Within a brief period he gained the social

recognition of the aristocratic Adams County planting and com-

mercial class and eventually married Anna Frances Farrar, a

member of one of the oldest families of the region. At the death

of his father-in-law he became the manager of some of the largest

cotton holdings in the state and seems to have displayed unusual

ability in his new vocation. Shortly after the death of his wife

he retired from active plantation life and removed to New Orleans

where he invested heavily in real estate, commercial and financial

interests. He erected a handsome dwelling4 on Canal Street where

 

1 This biographical sketch is based upon the following sources: Edwin Jewell,

The Crescent City (New Orleans, 1873); Henry Rightor, Standard History of New

Orleans, Louisiana (Chicago, 1900), New Orleans States, September 23, 1923.

2 Jewell states that Mercer was attached to the force of Captain Joshua Barney,

who, with a small band held the British at bay for a short time.

3 The account of Dr. William Newton Mercer's journey from Louisville to New

Orleans was published as "A Journey from Louisville to New Orleans in 1816; Diary

of William Newton Mercer," in Journal of Southern History (Baton Rouge, Louisi-

ana, 1935-), II (1936).

4 The present home of the Boston Club.

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