Mr. Blount was a builder of fine coastal ships, oil exploration vessels, and hospital ships. He also lead the revitalization of the states oyster industry.
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Samuel Casey (1724-?) was born in Newport, performed the craft of silversmithing in Exeter, Rhode Island, and, when his house burned down in 1764, relocated to what was known as Little Rest, better known to us as the village of Kingston. Casey was the most accomplished silversmith of early Rhode Island. His teapots, his creamers, tankards, and porringers are highly prized by collectors and are featured in all the top museums of the country that celebrate the skills of American colonial craftsmen. Casey’s works demonstrate the Queen Anne and Rococco styles, the first characterized by simple forms which relied on contour and plain surfaces with little decoration and the latter turned towards detail and surface ornamentation.
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William Claggett (1696-1749) was born the son of a baker in England or Wales, and as a youth he migrated with his family to Boston. He served an apprenticeship to clockmaker Benjamin Bagnall of Boston, and at age nineteen married Mary Armstrong in a ceremony presided over by Cotton Mather. His son William, who also became a noted clockmaker, was born in 1715.
By 1716 the young clockmaker and his family came to Newport where Claggett lived and worked for the next thirty-three years until his death in 1749.
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Mr. Goddard was an early Amercan cabinetmaker and the nation's first furniture craftsman. He was the originator of block front knee-hole desks and secratary's desks.
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John Gorham was born in Providence on November 18, 1820. He was the eldest son of
Charles I.D. Looff (1852-1918) is considered the first of the great American carousel builders having created 17 of them during his long career--some of which was spent living and working in Riverside, Rhode Island.
Charles I.
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John Townsend (1733-1809) was only one of at least 18 family members in an extended three-generation family of Townsends and Goddards who crafted the famed Newport style of American furniture from 1740 to 1840. Other famous members of their Quaker clan, who lived and worked in the Point section of Newport, were John Goddard, Joseph, Jr., and Christopher Townsend.
Newport was the destination of many cargoes of fine mahogany woods from Honduras and Santo Domingo.
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Considered by many, one of the three greatest American printers, Daniel Berkeley Updike was born in Providence on February 14, 1860. He was a descendant of Richard Smith, one of the earliest settlers of North Kingstown, and his family owned extensive tracts of land in the Wickford area, most notably Cocumscussoc. Updike attended private school and worked for a time at the Providence Athenaeum. It was here, perhaps, that he developed an appreciation for the art of fine printing.
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