William Emerson Damon

How are you related to William Emerson Damon?

Connect to the World Family Tree to find out

Share your family tree and photos with the people you know and love

  • Build your family tree online
  • Share photos and videos
  • Smart Matching™ technology
  • Free!

William Emerson Damon

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Hartland, Windsor County, VT, United States
Death: December 01, 1911 (73)
Damon family farm, Hartland, Windsor County, VT, United States (cystitis )
Place of Burial: Windsor, Windsor County, VT, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of Luther Damon and Betsey Damon
Husband of Alma C. Damon
Brother of Urias Edgar Damon; Luther Edward Damon; Elizabeth Emerson Damon; Sarah Jane Damon; Lucy Emerson Lamb and 2 others

Occupation: head of the cashier Dept. at Tiffanys NYC, jeweller
Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About William Emerson Damon

the TOWN HALL OF HARLTAND https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Damon_Hall was built in his honor
"Built in 1914-15 as a memorial to the locally prominent †† businessman William E. Damon" and his father Luther
see Vermont Standard Thu, Dec 09, 1915 ·Page 2

††: not just locally... He was a NYC businessman, well-connected in that city... PT.Barnum & Tiffany Co. See <timeline>

Vermont, U.S., Death Records, 1909-2008 for William E Damon
Windsor
1911

Brooklyn Eagle
Sat, Dec 02, 1911 ·Page 3 states place of Death along with an official Hartland cert.

"William Emerson Damon was the youngest son of Luther and Betsy Damon. He was educated in the public schools and at Kimball Union Academy in Meriden, NH. On Feb. 14, 1865, he married Alma C. Otis of Windsor. For many years Mr. Damon was superintendent of the credit department of Tiffany's, New York City. Largely through his efforts the New York Aquarium was established and Mr. Damon came to be considered an authority on matters pertaining to aquaria.
He also published a work: Ocean Wonders"

William Emerson Damon, the youngest son was born in Windsor in 1838. He was educated in the public schools and at Kimball Union Academy. Feb 14 1865 he married Alma Otis of Windsor. For many years Mr. Damon was superintendent of the credit department of Tiffany’s, New York City. Largely through his efforts the New York aquarium was established and Mr. Damon came to be considered an authority on matters pertaining to aquaria. His interest in the New York aquarium is referred to as follows in “Bermuda, Past and Present” by Walter Brownell Hayward. No less a personage than Phineas T. Barnum was the first to introduce Bermuda fishes to the New York aquarium public. Barnum, ever on the alert for new thrills, conceived the idea of bringing live specimens from tropical waters, and sent out two expeditions, one to Honduras, the other to Bermuda. Both returned without their fish, all having died in transit. Barnum was disappointed but was prevailed upon by one of his assistants, W.E. Damon, to fit out the well-smack Pacific which sailed to Bermuda in the summer of 1863. These being the days of blockade runners, all Northerners were regarded with suspicion and soon it was rumored that Mr. Damon in his frequent trips across the bays was taking soundings, not fish. Finally a peremptory order from the authorities halted his work and it was not until the American Consul had intervened on his behalf was Mr. Damon allowed to resume his harmless occupation. His party caught 600 fish, all of which were successfully transported to the greater glory and profit of Barnum and the pleasure of his patrons of the Ann Street museum Mr Damon’s “Ocean wonders” was published in 1879, was one of the first books to popularize life at the seashore. This book contains besides descriptions of various kinds of marine life, a chapter on marine and fresh water aquaria. All of Mr. Damon’s sisters were interested in natural history but he says in his preface to “Ocean Wonders” that it was his dear and honored sister, Elizabeth with her suggestive spirit and practical example who awakened in his mind a love for nature. He also acknowledges his indebtedness to the intelligent and sympathetic interest of his wife in his favorite study. Because of Mrs. Damon’s interest in her husbands avocation she has become interested in the Hartland Nature Club and has felt it a pleasure to contribute towards this building… Mr Damon never held public office … He died on the home farm in 1911.

From a speech by Harold Rugg at the dedication of Damon Hall on Dec. 2, 1916, reported in The Vermont Standard.

Reprinted from the December 2006 Hartland Historical Society Newsletter

The fish gathered on the journey chronicled above were shown with great effect at Ann St.,, aka P.T. Barnum's American Museum: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barnum%27s_American_Museum
Misfortune prevailed:

fire of March 3, 1868

"It was allegedly during this fire that a fireman by the name of Johnny Denham killed an escaped tiger with his ax before rushing into the burning building and carrying out a 400-pound woman on his shoulders. Barnum's New Museum opened September 6, 1865, at 539-41 Broadway, between Spring and Prince Streets, but that also burned down, on March 3, 1868. It was after this that Barnum moved on to politics and the circus industry." Barnum's American Museum was one of the most popular attractions of its time."

All the wonders of Damon's trip were lost....

primary work was for Tiffany's at several of the stores locations

" Charles Lewis Tiffany opened his emporium at 259 Broadway in New York City in 1837. Ten years later, Tiffany moved his enterprise to 271 Broadway, then to 550 Broadway in 1853 and, in 1870, to Union Square and 15th Street. Three years after his death in 1902, the company moved to Fifth Avenue and 37th Street; and in 1940, Tiffany’s iconic Fifth Avenue flagship store first opened its doors at 727 Fifth Avenue"

~• we can glean from this official history that Damon worked at 550 Broadway (during part of the 1853-1870 period), then Union Square (1870-1902), then, perhaps, if he hadn't retired. at 5th and 37th sts.

view all 12

William Emerson Damon's Timeline