Jesse Maltby Family Papers
Scope and Contents
The Jesse Maltby Family Papers primarily relate to the family’s time in Norfolk, Connecticut. A few items date from their residence in Bristolville, Trumbull County, Ohio, during 1837 to the 1850s. The Maltby family’s years in Oberlin, Ohio, are not represented in these documents.
Correspondence (1817-1887) discusses topics such as family news, religion, and Jesse Maltby’s business dealings. More information about Maltby’s business affairs is found in accounts (1823-1844), contracts (1827-36, undated), and property deeds (1820-1854). The papers contain a number of essays and poems, on general subjects such as the importance of education and beauty. The essays may have been written by pupils taught by Laura M. Baldwin (Jesse Maltby’s first wife) in Goshen, Connecticut. Miscellaneous items include tax receipts, directions for preparing various colors of Reynolds paint, and Laura M. Baldwin’s teaching certificate (1817).
Dates
- Creation: 1807 - 1887
- Other: Date acquired: 2001 September 10
Creator
- Maltby, Jesse, Family (Family)
- Maltby, Jesse (Person)
Conditions Governing Access
Unrestricted.
Biographical Sketch
Jesse Munger Maltby (also spelled Maltbie) was born in Norfolk, Connecticut, in 1797. He was one of eleven children of Benjamin (1750-1847) and Abigail Munger Maltbie (1750-1816): Simeon (1772-1868), Benjamin II (1773-1851), Abigail (1775-1823), Jacob (1776-1864), Ammi (1777-1854), Hannah (1781-1823), Elon (1783-1865), Lois (1784-1794), Nathaniel Harrison (1786-1855), Julia (1790-1822), and Daniel (1793-1884). In 1823, he married Laura M. Baldwin (1798-1824) of Goshen, Connecticut. They had one child, Lauren Baldwin Maltby (1823-1905). Laura died on April 19, 1824.
In 1825, Jesse Maltby married Salome Collar (1799-1885) of Massachusetts. Jesse and Salome Maltby had two children: Laura Minera (1826-1905) and Clarissa Collar (1834-1917).
Jesse Maltby lived in Norfolk, Connecticut, for the first forty years of his life. There he built houses for Solomon Cowles (1779-1858) and others. In 1837 or 1838, Jesse Maltby sold his farm to James Mark Cowles (1807-1871) and moved his family to the Western Reserve. They settled on an eighty-acre farm in Bristol, Trumbull County, Ohio, which Jesse Maltby purchased from Solomon Sager (1813-1873).
In Bristol, Maltby farmed and also served as an agent to sell scythes, and possibly other goods, on commission. He was known for his abolitionist sentiments and active participation in the Underground Railroad. A relative, Benjamin Maltby (1826-1912), lived with the family for some of their time in Trumbull County, according to the 1850 US Census.
Jesse Maltby sold his farm in 1854 and subsequently lived in several other places in Bristol Township. He may have relocated to Oberlin in Lorain County during 1854-55 when his daughter, Clarissa, was enrolled in Oberlin College. In 1857 he purchased two lots on West Lorain Street from Oberlin College. He later suffered financial decline and took up the trade of carpenter and joiner. In the 1873 Oberlin village directory, Jesse Maltby is listed as a mechanic.
The West Lorain Street property was sold to Alfred Cowles Platt (1828-1884) in 1860. Jesse Maltby later exchanged eighty acres of land in See County, Iowa, for property including a lot on Forest Street in Oberlin. The Maltby family lived in the house he built at 143 Forest Street (9 Forest Street prior to 1894) for over fifty years.
Jesse and Salome Maltby became members of First Congregational Church in Oberlin in 1857. At their golden wedding anniversary in April 1875, Professor Henry Cowles (1824-1908) spoke of his early acquaintance with Jesse Maltby during their school days in Norfolk, Connecticut, and S.A. Bushnell told of Maltby’s involvement in the Underground Railroad in Trumbull County.
Jesse Maltby died at his home in Oberlin, Ohio, on December 30, 1884, and Salome Maltby died December 4, 1885. Following their deaths, their daughter Clarissa continued to live in the family home. Her cousin Lydia J. Brockway Maltby ( 1820-92) also lived with her for a year before her death in 1892. Lydia Maltby was the mother of physicist Margaret Eliza Maltby (1860-1944; AB 1882, AM 1891) and of Martha Jane Maltby (1850-1932; Lit. 1874, hon. AM 1882, PhB 1895). A number of other Maltby cousins also attended Oberlin College, as did Jesse Maltby’s grandsons Selden Asa Reed (1855-1904; enr. prep. 1870-71) and Jesse Lauren Maltby (1867-1941, enr. prep. 1888-90).
Clarissa C. Maltby died on December 4, 1917. She was the last member of her immediate family to pass on, and was survived by two nieces and three nephews, none of whom lived in Oberlin.
The Maltby family farm on Morgan Street later became the property of Oberlin College through the bequest of Charles Martin Hall (1863-1914). It is now part of the Oberlin Golf Course.
Sources Consulted
Richard Byrne, Norfolk (Conn.) Historical Society. E-mail correspondence, June 10 & 18, 2002.
Carol Willsey Bell, Local History & Genealogy Center, Warren-Trumbull (Ohio) County Public Library. E-mail correspondence, June 15, 2002.
A.G. Hibbard, History of the Town of Goshen, Connecticut, with genealogies and biographies based upon the records of Deacon Lewis Mills Norton, 1897 (Hartford, Conn., Press of the Case, Lockwood & Brainard Co, 1897).
Jesse Maltby Family Papers, RG 30/338.
Oberlin College Library Autograph File (“M”), RG 16/5.
Oberlin News, 15 April 1875, 2 January 1885, and 14 January 1892.
Oberlin Tribune, 28 March 1913 and 14 December 1917.
Office of the Secretary (RG 5), Deeds and Property Files, "Park Property–Maltby, Reed, Evans".
US Federal Census, 1830-1880.
Note written by Melissa Gottwald; updated by Emily Rebmann.
Extent
0.20 Linear Feet
Language of Materials
English
Method of Acquisition
These papers were transferred to the Oberlin College Archives from the Oberlin College Library Special Collections in 2001.
Accruals and Additions
Accession No: 2001/94.
Genre / Form
Topical
- Title
- Jesse Maltby Family Papers Finding Guide
- Author
- Melissa Gottwald
- Date
- 2002 August 1
- Description rules
- Describing Archives: A Content Standard
- Language of description
- English
- Script of description
- Latin
Revision Statements
- 2002 August: Processed by Melissa Gottwald.
- 2025: Prepared for migration by Emily Rebmann.
Repository Details
Part of the Oberlin College Archives Repository
420 Mudd Center
148 West College Street
Oberlin OH 44074-1532 US
440-775-8014
440-775-8016 (Fax)
archive@oberlin.edu