Footnotes
David Kellogg Cartter, born in New York in 1812, served as a representative from Ohio to the United States Congress, 1849–1853. Cartter moved to Cleveland in 1856 and continued to practice law. He served as U.S. minister to Bolivia from 1861 to 1862 and was appointed chief justice of the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia in 1863, serving in that capacity until his death in Washington DC in 1887. (Biographical Directory of the United States Congress, 751; 1870 U.S. Census, 552686, M593_1187, p. 57A; 1880 U.S. Census, Washington DC, 56B.)
Biographical Directory of the United States Congress, 1774–1989: The Continental Congress September 5, 1774, to October 21, 1788, and the Congress of the United States from the First through the One Hundredth Congresses March 4, 1789, to January 3, 1989, Inclusive. Edited by Kathryn Allamong Jacob and Bruce A. Ragsdale. Washington DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1989.
Census (U.S.) / U.S. Bureau of the Census. Population Schedules. Microfilm. FHL.
J. W. Briggs, Bond, Kirtland, OH, 8 Mar. 1837, JS Office Papers, CHL.
David K. Cartter, Bond, 14 Jan. 1837, JS Office Papers, CHL. Eliakim Crosby was born in Connecticut in 1779, trained as a physician in New York, and moved with his family to Ohio in 1820. He helped found the town of Cascade, which became Akron, and was one of its most prominent residents. James W. Philips was a member of a committee that unsuccessfully petitioned the Ohio legislature for a bank in Akron in December 1835. In February 1837, a new firm called the Portage Canal and Manufacturing Company was incorporated by the legislature and was granted permission to issue bonds. Eliakim Crosby was the first president of this company, and James Philips served as a “special agent” for its business in New York. David Cartter is not listed as an officer of the new firm, but he may have been a stockholder. (Lane, Fifty Years and Over of Akron and Summit County, 41–45, 82–83.)
Lane, Samuel A. Fifty Years and Over of Akron and Summit County. Akron, OH: Beacon Job Department, 1892.
Unidentified handwriting begins.
As this agreement was created after the 2 January 1837 reorganization of the society into the Kirtland Safety Society Anti-Banking Company, the society in its official structure was no longer a bank. However, the wording of this agreement follows the banking-specific terminology used in the 2 November 1836 constitution of the Kirtland Safety Society, with the exception of the term “managers,” which was introduced in the 2 January 1837 articles of agreement. This use of the earlier-employed banking terminology suggests that the Kirtland Safety Society officers considered the institution a bank, despite its not yet being granted a charter by the Ohio legislature. (Constitution of the Kirtland Safety Society Bank, 2 Nov. 1836; Articles of Agreement for the Kirtland Safety Society Anti-Banking Company, 2 Jan. 1837.)
Insertion in the handwriting of David Cartter.