S.S._Pierce

S. S. Pierce

S. S. Pierce

American grocer


Samuel Stillman Pierce (1807–1880) was a grocer in Boston, Massachusetts, who established the S. S. Pierce company in 1831.

Quick Facts Born, Died ...

Biography

Samuel Stillman Pierce was born in Cedar Grove, Dorchester on March 27, 1807.[1][2] In 1836, he married Ellen Maria Wallis. They had eight children. The family lived in the South End and Dorchester.[3] He died at his home in Boston on October 12, 1880.[4]

S. S. Pierce & Co.

S. S. Pierce storefront (far left), corner of Tremont St. and Court St., Boston, 19th century

In 1831, Pierce and his partner, Eldad Worcester, "started out by wholesaling provisions to the ships that crowded what was then a very busy Boston Harbor, but soon enough Pierce was bartering with ship captains, often exchanging his provisions for the delicacies they would bring to Boston from faraway ports."[5] Pierce said, "I may not make money, but I shall make a reputation."[6]

The grocery business thrived, due in part to "celebrity customers ... John Quincy Adams, Daniel Webster,"[6] and Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr. who said: "I was brought up on S.S. Pierce's groceries and I don't dare change."[6]

The 1886 catalog for S. S. Pierce & Co., Importers and Grocers lists myriad items for sale in its Grocery, Wine, Cigar, and Perfumery Departments: gelatine; isinglass; chutneys; French vegetables in glass jars; Alghieri's soups; Wiesbaden goods; wines; Russian cigarettes; Egyptian cigarettes; quadruple essences; tooth brushes; soaps assorted; inexhaustible salts; and much more.

In 1887, the company moved from the corner of Tremont and Court Streets to Copley Square, into a new building designed by architect S. Edwin Tobey. Architecture critic Robert Campbell has observed of the building: "It's no masterpiece of architecture, but it's great urban design. A heap of dark Romanesque masonry, it anchored a corner of Copley Square as solidly as a mountain."[7] The building was demolished in 1958.

In 1892, S. S. Pierce, under Wallace Pierce, the son of the founder, purchased the former Coolidge & Brother store, a two-story wooden building in Coolidge Corner, Brookline that had been on the site since 1857 and opened a branch at that location. Six years later, the company built a new Tudor-style building with a clock tower featuring an open deck. The tower was damaged in a storm in 1948 and replaced with a new tower, minus the open deck. The building still stands as a historically significant landmark today.[8]

In addition to a wide variety of goods for sale, the company provided notable customer service.

The company hired horse-drawn sleighs to deliver groceries when snowstorms closed roads to auto traffic, and maintained a well-drilled corps of salesmen who would phone housewives at appointed hours. They not only suggested menus but answered such arcane questions as how to cook an ostrich egg (boil it) or how to extract the flavor from a 6-in. vanilla bean (bury a 1-in. cutting from the bean for a month in a pound of sugar). Once when a hostess in Poughkeepsie, N.Y., complained that a case of turtle soup had not arrived, a Pierce salesman took an overnight train to deliver it in person — just in time for her party.[6]

In 1972, the S. S. Pierce company was sold to Seneca Foods Corp., of New York.[9] which adopted the name S. S. Pierce until the 1980s.

Images


References

  1. Sammarco, Anthony Mitchell (1999). Dorchester: Volume II. Arcadia Publishing. pp. 129 see p.17, Includes illustration of Pierce. ISBN 9780738503363.
  2. Professional and Industrial History of Suffolk County, Massachusetts. Vol. II. The Boston History Company. 1894. Retrieved July 5, 2023 via Internet Archive.
  3. Sammarco, A. (May 29, 1992). "History: S.S. Pierce, pioneer in gourmet, imported foods". Dorchester Community News.
  4. "Samuel Stillman Pierce". The Boston Post. October 14, 1880. p. 2. Retrieved July 5, 2023 via Newspapers.com.
  5. Mulvoy, Thomas F. (November 30, 2003). "FYI". Boston Globe. p. 206. Retrieved July 5, 2023 via Newspapers.com.
  6. "Laird of the Epicurean Manner". TIME. June 23, 1967.
  7. Campbell, Robert; Vanderwarker, Peter (March 26, 2006). "Coming into Copley". The Boston Globe. p. BGM.16. Retrieved July 6, 2023 via Newspapers.com.
  8. Vrabel, Jim (2004). When in Boston. Bostonian Society. ISBN 9781555536213.

Further reading


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