Frost & Adams
Frost & Adams (est.1869) was an artists' supply firm in Boston, Massachusetts, located in Cornhill, on the current site of Boston City Hall and City Hall Plaza.[1][2][3][4] It began in 1869 when artist Francis Seth Frost and retailer E.H. Adams bought the business of Matthew J. Whipple.[5] By the 1880s Frost & Adams were "the chief dealers in artists' materials in New England."[6]
History
Proprietors included F.S. Frost, E.H. Adams, H.A. Lawrence, Herbert C. Gardner, Joseph H. Peacock, and Edward J. White.[4][7] The firm later moved to Arch Street (ca.1921).[8]
In the 1880s the firm stocked "all the materials used by painters, engravers, etchers, repousse-workers, china-painters, crayon artists, water colorists, tapestry-painters, architects, engineers, and draughtsmen." They also carried "fancy articles for decorating, in bronze and brass, porcelain and china, Albenine and Barbotine ware, bisque vases and terraline ware, tambourines of sheepskin, calfskin, brass, and satin."[6] "Five-sixths of the trade is wholesale, extending throughout New England, the Middle and Western States, and Canada, and kept in activity by travelling salesmen."[6]
Some art world luminaries shopped at Frost & Adams. It was "the depot of supplies for Hunt, Inness, Neal, Brown, Enneking, Norton, Vinton, Picknell, Gaugengigl, Shapleigh, ... H.H. Richardson, Cabot & Chandler, Van Brunt & Howe, Peabody & Stearns."[6]
Sometime after 1921, Frost & Adams was bought by the H.H. Sullivan Company, which itself was acquired by B.L. Makepeace Inc. in 1931.[9] As of 2010, Makepeace operates from headquarters in Brighton, Massachusetts, and specializes in reprographics and survey equipment.
References
- ↑ Boston commercial directory. 1869
- ↑ Boston Almanac. 1875
- ↑ In 1889, the firm had a 5-story retail outlet at no.37 Cornhill, "two floors at No. 69 Cornhill, devoted to manufacturing, and several large storage and packing rooms at No. 34 Cornhill." Cf. King's. 1889
- 1 2 Directory of directors in the city of Boston and vicinity. 1911
- ↑ Whipple established his business sometime around the 1830s. Cf. King's. 1889
- 1 2 3 4 Moses King (1889), King's hand-book of Boston, Boston: M. King
- ↑ Advertisement in: Loan collection of portraits for the benefit of the Associated Charities and the North End Union. Boston: 1896
- ↑ Boston register and business directory. 1921
- ↑ "More Than a Century of Growth and Change". B.L. Makepeace Inc. Retrieved 18 August 2010.
Further reading
- Frost & Adams Co, Boston. Descriptive Catalogue. Importers of Artists' Materials, Draughting Papers, Tracing Cloth, and Mathematical Instruments, 1877.
- Norman E. Muller. Checklist of Boston Retailers in Artist's Materials: 1823-1887. Journal of the American Institute for Conservation, Vol. 17, No. 1 (Autumn, 1977), pp. 53–69
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Frost & Adams. |
- Catalogue of Artists' Materials & Mathematical Instruments, Frost & Adams Co., Boston, Massachusetts, USA, 1905
- Flickr. Photo of canvas from Frost and Adams Cornhill-Boston ca.1856
- Flickr. Close-up photo of canvas from Frost and Adams Cornhill-Boston ca.1856
Images
- Advertisement, 1882
- Advertisement for Frost & Adams; and branch store A.A. Walker & Co., opposite Bijou Theatre, Washington St., 1884
- Advertisement, 1896
- Cornhill, Boston, 1897
- Catalog, 1905
Coordinates: 42°21′34.58″N 71°3′27.81″W / 42.3596056°N 71.0577250°W