Jabez Bowen, Sr. (June 2, 1739May 7, 1815) was an Americans shipper, slave trader and politician. He was a militia colonel during the American Revolutionary War, and served as Deputy Governor of Rhode Island and chief justice of the Rhode Island Supreme Court.
He married Sarah Brown on December 19, 1762, a cousin of Moses Brown and John Brown of the prominent Brown family ( see Brown University) of Providence. Bowen was deeply involved with the Browns in the shipping business, involving slaves, molasses, rum, and the China trade.
Bowen was Deputy Governor of Rhode Island for a total of seven years from May 1778 to May 1780, and from May 1781 to May 1786. He was a delegate to the Annapolis Convention in 1786 and the Constitutional Convention in 1790.
He served as a Superior Court judge from August 1776 to May 1778, and became chief justice in February 1781 following the death of Shearjashub Bourn, holding that office until May 1781. Manual – the State of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations (1891), p. 208-13. Bowen was an ardent federalist (pro-Constitution) supporter, and was on the city committee which negotiated a peaceful end to William West's antifederalist protest on the Fourth of July in 1788.Rhode Island Historical Society Collections, (The Society, 1843), pg. 332 [2] Bowen served as Chancellor of Brown University from 1785 until his death.
He died on May 7, 1815, in Providence, and is interred in Swan Point Cemetery in Providence.
He was a Freemasonry in St. Johns Lodge #1 Providence, and served as Master of the lodge from 1779 to 1790, and served as Grand Master in Providence from 1794 to 1798. Bowen was elected a member of the American Antiquarian Society in 1814. American Antiquarian Society Members Directory
His mahogany tea table is currently at the Winterthur Museum, Garden and Library in Winterthur, Delaware. The tea table was made in 1763 by John Goddard at Goddard and Townsend in Newport, Rhode Island.
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