06800mpc 2201069 a 4500001000800000005001700008008004100025035002500066035002200091040002400113100003500137245004100172300001800213545089100231520136901122520106302491555002303554510007103577524010903648600002203757600003003779600004203809600003203851600001803883600002303901600002903924600002003953600002603973600001603999600003904015600003404054600002004088600001904108600001704127600001904144600001604163600002104179600001804200600002104218600002004239600003204259600004004291600004004331600002504371600003104396600003004427600003404457610004404491610002004535610006104555610002404616610003104640610002404671610002904695610003404724650002604758650003704784650002004821650003004841650002004871650002404891650002104915650002804936650001204964650001904976650002004995650001205015650002105027650001805048651004605066651004505112651004005157651004605197651002605243651004405269651004305313651003805356651004405394651004605438651004405484655002005528655001805548655002505566655001505591655001605606655002005622655002205642650001705664650001905681905002105700998000905721210292020000110120000.0840726i17981918nyu eng d a(CStRLIN)NYCV84A1201 a(NIC)notisAKU2078 aNICcNICeappmdNIC1 aDow, John Melmoth,d1827-1892.00aJohn Melmoth Dow papers,f1798-1918. a6.4 cubic ft. aJohn Melmoth Dow was a shipmaster, shipping agent and naturalist. Born in New York City in 1827, he joined the Panama Railroad Company. He made his first voyage to the Central American coast in 1851, and remained involved with Central and South American coastal trade as a ship captain until 1876. He was appointed commander of the steamer Constitution in 1853, and opened the Central American service of the Panama Railroad Company as commander of the steamer Colombus. He later became a shipping agent for the Pacific Mail Steamship Company. During his years as a shipping agent, Dow was captured and held hostage by revolutionist Pedro Prest án in 1885. He was arbitrator in the dispute between the Compagnie Universelle du Canal Interocéanique and the American Contracting and Dredging Company in their attempt to build the French Canal in Panama. Dow died in New York City in 1892. aPersonal and professional papers of John M. Dow include shipping and trading contracts with Central American governments; administrative records, cargo and freight (primarily coffee and indigo) statements; and financial and commercial records, annual reports, logs, schedules, and telegraph code. Also included are letters and newspaper clippings concerning political events in Central America in the second half of the nineteenth century; correspondence with Central American politicians such as General Barrios, Rafael Zaldívar and Enrico Palacio regarding United States policy toward attempts to unify the Central American countries into a single federation. Also included is Dow's correspondence as arbitrator in the settlement between the Compagnie Universelle du Canal Interocéanique and the American Contracting and Dredging Company, 1887. Dow also pursued his interests as a naturalist, exploring the Central American coast to collect marine flora and fauna and carrying on an extensive correspondence with Professor Spencer Baird of the Smithsonian Institution and Osbert Salvin and P. L. Sclater of the Zoological Society of London concerning the collection and transportation of specimens native to Central America. Papers also contain several letters to his wife, Elizabeth Allen Dow, which provide daily accounts of his life on board ship and in port. bAmong other correspondents are William Henry Aspinwall, John Cassin, Alexander Center, William Pancoast Clyde, Charles Dorat, John Charles Frémont, Joseph I. Henry, David Hoadley, J. B. Houston, J. Jacquier, Joseph F. Joy, W. H. Lane, George Newbold, James Orton, Henry Shelton Sanford, George Ure Skinner, Henry Bartholomew Slaven and Jeffries Wyman. Eight diaries kept by Dow provide comments on his daily life, and two notebooks give descriptions of the coast of Central America. Photographs include Dow and several Central American scenes. An album contains portraits of Dow's family, relatives and acquaintances, and well-known persons. There are two albums of caricatures and a book of "Ocean Mosses" (pressed specimens) given to Elizabeth Allen "from her friend Capt'n John M. Dow." Remaining items include a significant group of nineteenth century maps, membership certificates, inventories of property, bills, bank books, insurance policies, memoranda, passenger lists, menus, invitations, and printed matter pertaining primarily to natural history.0 aUnpublished guide.0 aDescribed in DOCUMENTATION NEWSLETTER, Vol. I, No. 1, Spring 1975. aJohn Melmoth Dow papers, #2765. Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections, Cornell University Library.10aAllen, Elizabeth.10aAspinwall, William Henry.10aBaird, Spencer Fullerton,d1823-1887.10aBarrios, Gerardo,cGeneral.10aCassin, John.10aCenter, Alexander.10aClyde, William Pancoast.10aDorat, Charles.10aDow, Elizabeth Allen.30aDow family.10aFrémont, John Charles,d1813-1890.10aHenry, Joseph I.,d1797-1878.10aHoadley, David.10aHouston, J. B.10aJacquier, J.10aJoy, Joseph F.10aLane, W. H.10aNewbold, George.10aOrton, James.10aPalacio, Enrico.10aPrestán, Pedro.10aSalvin, Osbert,d1835-1898.10aSclater, Philip Lutley,d1829-1913.10aSanford, Henry Shelton,d1823-1891.10aSkinner, George Ure.10aSlaven, Henry Bartholomew.10aWyman, Jeffries,db.1864.10aZalvídar, Rafael,d1834-1896.20aAmerican Contract and Dredging Company.20aColombus (ship)20aCompagnie Universelle du Canal Interocéanique de Panama.20aConstitution (ship)20aPacific Mail Steamship Co.20aPanama Railroad Co.20aSmithsonian Institution.20aZoological Society of London. 0aCanals, Interoceanic. 0aCanalsxDesign and construction. 0aCargo handling. 0aCaricatures and cartoons. 0aCoastal plants. 0aCoastwise shipping. 0aCoffee industry. 0aFreight and freightage. 0aIndigo. 0aMarine plants. 0aMarine animals. 0aMosses. 0aNatural history. 0aShipsxCargo. 0aCentral AmericaxCommercezUnited States. 0aCentral AmericaxDescription and travel. 0aCentral AmericaxForeign relations. 0aCentral AmericaxPolitics and government. 0aPanama Canal (Panama) 0aSouth AmericaxCommercezUnited States. 0aSouth AmericaxDescription and travel. 0aSouth AmericaxForeign relations. 0aSouth AmericaxPolitics and government. 0aUnited StatesxCommercezCentral America. 0aUnited StatesxCommercezSouth America. 7aContracts.2aat 7aDiaries.2aat 7aLogs (records).2aat 7aMaps.2aat 7aMenus.2aat 7aNotebooks.2aat 7aPhotographs.2aat 0aNaturalists. 0aShip captains. a20000110120000.0 s9554