Wealth with a Conscience - Bedford, MA
Posted by: Groundspeak Regular Member Lat34North
N 41° 38.156 W 070° 55.455
19T E 339729 N 4611144
Benjamin Rodman built this federal style home in 1821. He and his wife Susan were founding members of the New Bedford Benevolent Society.
Waymark Code: WMMEAV
Location: Massachusetts, United States
Date Posted: 09/08/2014
Published By:Groundspeak Regular Member Shorelander
Views: 2

Makers Text:

Wealth with a Conscience
Early whaling merchants lived in elegant houses along the street. But by the time Benjamin Rodman built this federal style home in 1821, many of his wealthy friends were moving uphill away from this shoreside neighborhood.

Though born into a prosperous whaling family, Rodman committed himself to the city’s working poor. He and his wife Susan were founding members of the New Bedford Benevolent Society, created “to devise some means for the relief of the physical and moral wants of the poor of this town.” In the 1830s he began championing the abolition of slavery. While whaling wealth is apparent in the city’s historic houses, the owner’s lives reflected some of the powerful social issues of the time.

Yesterday I suppose you know was an awful storm, but I went in the evening to Ben Rodman’s party. All that clique were there and all talking abolition.
Deborah Weston, April 15, 1839

By the 1890s Rodman’s house was hemmed and on all sides by storefronts and warehouse space. Used as a warehouse for forty years, the mansion was purchased and donated to the Waterfront Historic Area League (WHALE) in 1965. WHALE removed the structures modern additions and restored the building.


This marker is located at 50 North Second Street, New Bedford, MA, in the historic district.
Agency Responsible for Placement: National Park Service

County: Bristol

City/Town Name: Bedford

Agency Responsible for Placement (if not in list above): Not listed

Year Placed: Not listed

Relevant Web Site: Not listed

Visit Instructions:
When logging a Massachusetts Historic Marker, we ask that you not only describe your visit, but to upload a picture from it. The picture does not have to be of the marker - one picture of the marker is enough. But a photo of you standing next to the marker or a photograph the subject of the marker - those are examples of possible photographs to upload.
Search for...
Geocaching.com Google Map
Google Maps
MapQuest
Bing Maps
Nearest Waymarks
Nearest Massachusetts Historical Markers
Nearest Geocaches
Create a scavenger hunt using this waymark as the center point
Recent Visits/Logs:
Date Logged Log User Rating  
Lat34North visited Wealth with a Conscience - Bedford, MA 08/31/2014 Lat34North visited it