Newkirk was born May 31, 1794, the eighth of nine children, in Pittsgrove, New Jersey, to Cornelius and Abigail (Hanna) Newkirk.[2] At 16, he moved to Philadelphia to live with and work for Joseph and Collin Cooper, dry goods merchants on Front Street. He worked with them until he was 21 years old and learned the business.[3]
He volunteered for military service in the War of 1812; he served in the Second Company, Washington Guards of the First Regiment of Pennsylvania volunteers[4][5] and left the service as a corporal.[6]
In 1817, he married Jane Reese Stroud, who would die 21 months later of tuberculosis.[7]
Career
He and a sister, Mary, opened a dry goods store on North Second Street in Philadelphia.[8] The business and subsequent ones thrived, and he expanded his reach as far as New Orleans.[9]
From 1821, he formed a partnership with William Heberton. The firm Newkirk and Heberton conducted wholesale and retail trade at 95 Market Street until 1824.[10] The following year, he formed a mercantile partnership with Charles S. Olden, who would later become governor of New Jersey.[11]
In 1832, he bought the resort hotel at Brandywine Springs, six miles west of Wilmington, Delaware, where he owned a vacation cottage; he spent sums to improve the building and its grounds.[12]
He was elected to the Select Council, the predecessor body to the Philadelphia City Council that chose the city's mayors until 1839 and appointed city officers until 1885.[13]
In 1835, Newkirk bought a vacant lot at 13th and Arch Streets in downtown Philadelphia and built a mansion.[15][16][17] Designed by Thomas Ustick Walter, it was built of marble and featured a fresco by Italian artist Nicola Monachesi.[18]
That same year, Newkirk bought 3,000 shares in the Wilmington and Susquehanna Railroad[19] and 3,587 shares in the Baltimore and Port Deposit Railroad.[20] He would spend much of the 1830s on further efforts to raise money for and build a rail line from Philadelphia south to the cities of Wilmington, Delaware, and Baltimore. Four railroads were ultimately chartered by the various states; Newkirk funded and directed the building of the W&S and the B&PD, then orchestrated its merger with the other two. In 1838, the merged PW&B began direct rail service between the cities, broken only by a ferry across the Susquehanna River. Much of its right-of-way is still in use today by Amtrak's Northeast Corridor.
Among the railroad's achievements was the first permanent bridge across the Schuylkill River south of Market Street, which the PW&B's directors named for Newkirk.[1] They also presented their president with a silver service that included a large soup tureen, two tall pitchers, and an engraved tray; the tray alone was worth $1,000 ($28,613 today[21]).[22] In 1896, the service was sold by a Philadelphia pawn shop to a New York City dealer.[23]
He was close friends with Henry Clay and would host and entertain Clay on his frequent trips to Philadelphia.[28] A deeply religious man, Newkirk served for 34 years as an elder of Philadelphia's Central Presbyterian Church.[13]
Philanthropy
In 1843, Newkirk was listed as the donor of the single largest monetary gift to the University of Delaware: $100. The university library still purchases books through the Matthew Newkirk Memorial Fund.[29]
On August 14, 1838, the PW&B board of directors named the bridge over the Schuykill River in Newkirk's honor and commissioned the Newkirk Viaduct Monument at its west end.[22]
Newkirk died on May 31, 1868[34] in his Philadelphia mansion[35] and was interred at Laurel Hill Cemetery.[36] He was survived by one child, Matthew Newkirk, a Presbyterian minister.[37] In his will, Newkirk bequeathed more than $1 million ($22,900,000 today[21]) to his family, and $500 to the Central Presbyterian Church of Philadelphia to buy books.[38]
Eight years later, his family sold Newkirk's mansion to the Society of the Sons of St. George, which renamed it "St. George's Hall" and used it as their headquarters. It was demolished in 1903.[39] The front colonnade survived and is displayed at the Princeton Battlefield State Park in New Jersey.[40]
^"SW Corner of 13th and Arch". Bob's Philadelphia History. February 18, 2013. Archived from the original on October 11, 2016. Retrieved April 20, 2016.
^"1835 (June 2004 Edition)"(PDF). PRR CHRONOLOGY. The Pennsylvania Railroad Technical & Historical Society. June 2004. Archived from the original(PDF) on February 14, 2012. Retrieved 23 July 2013.
^ ab"1838 (June 2004 Edition)"(PDF). PRR CHRONOLOGY. The Pennsylvania Railroad Technical & Historical Society. June 2004. p. 2. Archived(PDF) from the original on 14 October 2013. Retrieved 23 July 2013.
^"SW Corner of 13th and Arch". Bob's Philadelphia History. February 18, 2013. Archived from the original on October 11, 2016. Retrieved April 20, 2016.