Joseph Ottolenghe (314)

Election date: 1771

Joseph Ottolenghe (c. 1711–1775) was a catechist, manufacturer, politician, slaveholder, and a member of the American Philosophical Society, elected in 1771. Born in Casale, Italy, to a Jewish family, Joseph Ottolenghe received license to work as a shohet, or ritual butcher, right before moving in with his uncle in London in 1732. The pair relocated to Exeter after a failed attempt to have Ottolenghe marry his uncle’s daughter. After learning English, he read the New Testament and converted to Christianity. This furthered the growing divide between him and his uncle: the fissure landed Ottolenghe in debtor’s prison. Luckily, his fellow Anglicans learned of his plight and secured his release. Ottolenghe then established himself in Exeter and lived there for a number of years. In 1751, he answered the call to work in the colony of Georgia as a catechist to the enslaved black people living there.

While his catechist work saw little success due to his own prejudices and the transitory nature of life in enslavement, Ottolenghe quickly established himself in other arenas of colonial life: by 1753 he owned 500 acres of land and became superintendent at the newly established silk filature, he entered the Georgia General Assembly in 1755, and began serving as Justice for the Peace for Savannah and Christ Church Parish in 1756. Through his influence, the high quality of Georgian silk became known throughout the British empire, and Ottolonghe’s writing on silk-manufacturing appeared in London and Philadelphia. He also influenced countless fundamental pieces of Georgian legislature until being dismissed in 1766 for his contemptuous behavior and disobedience. His jealousy and paranoia also delayed his taking an apprentice in the silk business for many years. Despite this, Joseph Ottolenghe died an influential figure in multiple fields of Georgian life, and with a successor to carry on his work in the filature until the Revolutionary War disrupted the business.




Member(s): Joseph Ottolenghe
314.001
An answer to two papers lately publish'd by Gabriel Treves, a Jew of the City of Exeter : the one ... a vindication of the proceedings of Gabriel Treves against Joseph Solomon Ottolenghe, ... the other ... an advertisement : wherein is contain'd the said Joseph Ottolenghe's vindication of himself, ...
Creator(s):
Ottolenghe, Joseph Solomon, approximately 1711-1775 (Author)
Publication:
London: printed for Edward Score, Exeter : and sold by Samuel Birt, London, [1735?]
Record Source:
Editions:
1x 1735 (London)
Editions Note:

One edition.

Holding Note: APS does not own this text. Help the APS acquire this item.



Member(s): Joseph Ottolenghe
314.002
Directions for breeding silk-worms, extracted from a letter of Joseph Ottolenghe, Esq : late superintendent of the public filature in Georgia.
Creator(s):
Ottolenghe, Joseph Solomon, approximately 1711-1775 (Author)
Publication:
Philadelphia: Printed by Joseph Crukshank, in Third-Street, [1771]
Subjects:
Silkworms -- Breeding.
Record Source:
References:
Sabin 57895 | Evans 12172
APS Subjects:
Biology
Editions:
1x 1771 (Philadelphia)
Editions Note:

One edition.

Holding Note: APS does not own this text. Help the APS acquire this item.