Family:Whitney, Thomas (b1765-a1828)

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Thomas Whitney, parentage unknown, was born before 1765 and died after 1820.

He married an unknown woman.

They appear to have had children, based upon census records.

Thomas Whitney, an English artisan who settled in Philadelphia, advertised "surveying instruments on an improved construction" in 1798, and by 1820 he had made about five hundred compasses, "the good qualities of which are well known to many Surveyors, in at least sixteen of the States and Territories of the Union." Whitney sold plain compasses for thirty to thirty-seven dollars, and "Nonius or Minute" compasses for forty to sixty dollars. He also kept a "book of record for Magnetic Observations” and invited contributions from "any gentleman who is pleased to throw light on this important subject."[1]

Census

References

  • Census records

1. ^  Deborah Jean Warner, True North—And Why It Mattered in Eighteenth-Century America, p. 383.



Copyright © 2010, Tim Doyle and the Whitney Research Group