Arnold Welles (1727-1802)

J.P., of 1 Park Street, Boston; President of the United States Bank at Boston

He was born at Boston and graduated from Harvard (1745). In Boston, he became a merchant, trading in commodities and slaves, and was the owner of the Long Wharf. He was appointed a Justice of the Peace in 1759. During the Revolution, he firmly sided with the Patriots and while he might have been viewed as a smuggler by the British (his chief occupation was to "obtain foodstuffs for the town"), he enjoyed legal protection on account of his father being the judge of the court in which he might otherwise have been tried. From 1797 to 1802, he served as President of the Bank of the United States at Boston that was owned by his enterprising nephew, Samuel Welles. He bought a pair of building lots at 1 & 2 Park Street in Boston, selling the latter to Dr. John Warren (his daughter-in-law's uncle) for $8,000, and using the proceeds to construct his own home at No. 1. In 1760, he married Susannah, daughter of John Jones, Merchant of Bristol, England, and Dorchester, Massachusetts. They had three children.

Parents

Samuel Welles

of Boston; Judge & Member of the Governor's Council of Massachusetts

1689-1770

Abigail (Arnold) Welles

Mrs "Hannah" Abigail (Arnold) Welles

1695-1765

Spouse

Susannah (Jones) Welles

Mrs Susannah (Jones) Welles

b.c.1735

Children

Arnold Welles

Brigadier-General Arnold Welles, of Boston; died without children

1761-1827

John Welles

Banker of Welles & Co., Paris, and J & B Welles & Co., Boston

1764-1855

Hannah (Welles) Taylor

Mrs Hannah (Welles) Taylor

1776-1845

The Descendants of Governor Thomas Welles of Connecticut and His Wife Alice Tomes - by Barbara Jean Mathews