Saturday, September 29, 2018
William Boylan- Old North State biography - done
BIOGRAPHICAL HISTORY
OF NORTH CAROLINA
"OLD NORTH STATE" EDITION
https://ia800208.us.archive.org/19/items/cu31924092215486/cu31924092215486.pdf
WILLIAM BOYLAN
''NE of the early journalists of Raleigh was
William Boylan, editor of the Minerva, and a
man of State-wide prominence. This gentleman
was born in Somerset County, New Jersey, on
September i, 1777. He was a son of John Boylan,
and the maiden name of his mother was
Eleanor Hodge. Young Boylan came to North Carolina to work
in the office of his uncle, Abraham Hodge, one of the State's
early printers. Mr. Hodge first engaged in business in North
Carolina about the beginning of January, 1785, the firm being
Hodge & Blanchard, publishers of the State Gazette of North
Carolina, at New-Bern. Shortly thereafter Henry Wills succeeded
Mr. Blanchard, and the firm became Hodge & Wills.
Judge Iredell prevailed on Hodge & Wills to remove to Edenton
about the year 1787. The firm afterward removed from Edenton
to Halifax, and in the latter town began publishing the North
Carolina Journal, in July, 1793. It was in 1797, when he was
but twenty years old, that William Boylan (subject of this sketch)
became a member of the firm of Hodge & Boylan, publishers at
Fayetteville of the North Carolina Minerva and Fayetteville
Gazette. The paper last named was later removed to the State
capital. In its new location it was first called the North Carolina
Minerva and Raleigh Advertiser, and afterward simply The
Minerva The facts above enumerated are taken from a work by Doctor
Stephen B. Weeks entitled "The Press of North Carolina in the
Eighteenth Century," which also contains a sketch of the life
of Mr. Hodge.
It was about 1799 that Mr. Boylan became a citizen of Raleigh.
In addition to his newspaper business, he had a bookstore, and
also became president of the State Bank, succeeding Colonel
William Polk. Both Boylan and Polk were Federalists of the
deepest dye, and strong friends.
For many years Hodge & Boylan were printers to the State,
and held that position as long as their party remained in power.
By the laws of 1801, the Raleigh Academy was incorporated,
and Mr. Boylan was one of its Board of Trustees. His associates
on that board were John Craven, William White, Sherwood Haywood,
Theophilus Hunter, John Ingles, Nathaniel Jones of White
Plains, Matthew McCullers, William Hinton, Simon Turner,
Samuel High, Joseph Gales, John Marshall, and Henry Seawell.
In this famous school were afterward educated many eminent
men, including William Rufus King, Vice-President of the United
States; Leonidas Polk, the bishop and Confederate general;
James Iver MacKay, of Bladen, chairman of the Committee of
Ways and Means in 1845 ; and others who attained distinction in
public life.
When the publication of the Minerva began in Raleigh, its rival
paper was the Raleigh Register, edited by Joseph Gales. Boylan
and Gales, being political opponents, were often not on good
terms personally, and their differences culminated in a personal
attack on -Gales by Mr. Boylan in December, 1908. For the
injuries he received on this occasion Mr. Gales instituted a civil
suit and recovered £100, which he donated to the Raleigh Academy.
When political animosities had somewhat cooled, better
relations existed between these gentlemen, and their descendants
grew up as friends and neighbors, so remaining at the present time.
When the old capitol at Raleigh was burned on June 21, 1831,
and it had been decided to erect a new building, Mr. Boylan was
appointed one of the commissioners to cause the erection of the present edifice. The sum of $50,000 was appropriated to cover
the cost of building. The commissioners thought this amount was
a good enough start, so invested the whole sum in a foundation.
Then they put up a building more in keeping with the dignity of
North Carolina, and it cost the State $530,000. It was for many
years regarded as the finest public building in America.
In the course of time Mr. Boylan's business ventures brought
him a handsome fortune, and he retired from editorial work. He
gave his newspaper outfit to his brother, Abraham Hodge Boylan,
who soon disposed of it.
Long after he had retired from newspaper work it was a custom
with William Boylan to visit the printing offices in Raleigh and
chat with the compositors. Having been a practical printer in
his younger days, he was always interested in the welfare of the
craft. Mr. Boylan was owner of plantations in North Carolina
and Mississippi, and also held much property in slaves, which
latter was, of course, swept away by the war.
In his Tucker Hall address at Raleigh, August 24, 1867, ex-
Governor Swain tells the following anecdote of our subject
:
"The late William Boylan, the first editor of the Raleigh Minerva, and the
immediate successor of Colonel Polk as president of the State Bank, was
a gentleman sedate and grave in a manner to a degree that to a stranger
might have been taken for austerity. Traveling from Raleigh to Pittsboro
about 1800, he and Mr. Peace, on reaching the election ground at Brassfields,
found a multitude assembled engaged in dancing and other rural
sports in the free and easy manner characteristic of the time and place.
Mr. Peace was comparatively at home. Mr. Boylan stood aloof until a
rowdy approached and invited him to enter the ring with the dancers. On
his declining, a dozen came forward prepared to coerce the submission of
the proud aristocrat. In an instant Mr. Peace, with great solemnity, beckoned
the leader of the band aside and whispered : 'My friend, be careful
how you act. Bless your life, that is Mr. Boylan, the man who made the
almanac, and can foretell eclipses and thunderstorms.' The reference to
the almanac-maker secured at once the most deferential respect for the distinguished
visitor."
Prior to the invention of the cotton-gin very little cotton was
raised in North Carolina, or, in fact, anywhere else. About the time of his removal to Wake County, when the new mechanical
invention was taking shape, Mr. Boylan began planting cotton,
and prevailed on his neighbors to do likewise. This was. the first
ever raised in Wake County^ Even before he came to Raleigh,
Mr. Boylan had done some experimental work as a raiser of this
staple.
In addfition to his private interests, Mr. Boylan was a man
deeply interested in industries affecting the general pubHc, and
strongly advocated public improvements. At the session of 1848
the act of Assembly was passed incorporating the North Carolina
Railroad Company, the State making a subscription of $2,000,000,
conditioned upon $1,000,000 being subscribed by individuals.
The friends of the work addressed themselves zealously to the
task of raising this $1,000,000 of private stock, but at first failed
to accomplish it. Eventually Governor Morehead, Mr. Boylan,
Mr. Calvin Graves, and some others made an extensive canvass
of the State in the interest of the work, and still quite a large
amount of stock remained to be taken. In this emergency
Mr. Boylan joined with others and subscribed for the remaining
shares, and thus secured the State aid. The efforts of Mr. Boylan
and his associates in this matter deserve to be held in grateful
remembrance by all who realize the great benefit the construction
of this important railroad has been to the people of the State. He
set an example of patriotism that is worthy of emulation.
Mr. Boylan was twice married : first, to Elizabeth McCuUoch
;
second, to Jane Elliott. His first wife was a daughter of Benjamin
McCulloch, of Halifax, and a granddaughter of the Honorable
Alexander McCulloch, member of the King's Council of North
Carolina in colonial days. Mr. Boylan left a large family, but
the only descendants who bear his surname are a son and the
grandchildren of the late William Montfort Boylan, of Raleigh,
who was one of the sons of his father's first wife, Elizabeth
McCulloch. William Montfort Boylan left two sons, William
and James, the latter now deceased; and two daughters,
Mrs. George H. Snow and Mrs. Joseph A. Haywood, the last
named being dead also.
William Boylan, our present subject, died in his eighty-fourth
year at Raleigh, on July 15, 1861. His remains were interred
in his family plot in the Old City Cemetery. On the monument
which marks his resting place we find the following epitaph
:
"He removed in his early youth to North Carolina, where he resided
until his death, beloved and respected by all. He was a patriotic and
public-spirited man, and ardently devoted to the interests and improvement
of his adopted State."
Marshall DeLancey Haywood.
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