John Cabot (b. 1680 in British Channel …

Years: 1804 - 1815

John Cabot (b. 1680 in British Channel Isle of Jersey) and his son, Joseph Cabot (b. 1720 in Salem), had become highly successful merchants, operating a fleet of privateers carrying opium, rum, and slaves.

Shipping during the eighteenth century had been the lifeblood of most of Boston’s first families, who usually got their start with the help of merchant king Colonel Thomas Perkins.

Joseph’s sons, Joseph Cabot Jr. (b.1746 in Salem), George Cabot (b. 1752 in Salem), and Samuel Cabot (b. 1758 in Salem), had left Harvard to work their way through shipping, furthering the family fortune and becoming extraordinarily wealthy.

Two of the earliest U.S. Supreme Court cases, Bingham v. Cabot (1795) and Bingham v. Cabot (1798) had involved family shipping disputes.

Samuel Cabot had relocated to Boston in 1784.

From John Cabot's grandson, Samuel Cabot's side, Samuel Cabot Jr. (b. 1784 in Boston) has furthered the family fortune by combining the first family staples of working in shipping and marrying money.

In 1812, he marries Eliza Perkins, daughter of Colonel Thomas Perkins.

Samuel Cabot, Jr. attempts to purchase opium from the British, then smuggle it into China under the auspices of British smugglers.

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