The John Bargrave Collection
Joseph Lord (1672 - 1748)
A major source of objects for Petiver and a correspondent until 1711 (Stearns, 348). The "Job Lord" Petiver refers to in a 1706 appendix to his Gazophylacii, under the heading of "Carolina Plants."Joseph Lord, the son of a cordwainer of Charlestown, Massachusetts, and graduate of Harvard College in 1691, was a schoolmaster at Dedham and later at Dorchester before he was ordained minister (October 22, 1695) and accompanied five other New Englanders as a missionary to Charleston, South Carolina, in December, 1695. There he settled in a town later named Dorchester, about twenty miles from Charleston on the east bank of the Ashley River. In 1701, perhaps at the hands of Madame Williams, he met Captain William Halsteed, who persuaded him to send to James Petiver five quires of dried Carolina plants which he had collected. Petiver acknowledged their receipt in a letter to Lord of May 20, 1701, expressing much pleasure with the collection, "which I understand by him [Captain Halsteed] I am obliged to you for as also for Collecting most of them yourself" (Stearns, 346).Relevant locations: Lived at or near Charleston
Lived at or near Ashley River
People linked to person: Joseph Lord was a associate or acquaintance (general) of William Halsteed (-fl. c. 1703)
Joseph Lord was a correspondent of James Petiver (c. 1665-Apr 1718)
Joseph Lord was a source of object(s) for James Petiver (c. 1665-Apr 1718)
Joseph Lord was a associate or acquaintance (general) of Madam Williams (-fl. c. 1702)