Background
Parish was born in 1778 in Hamburg, Germany, the grandson of an English merchant who had transferred his business to Hamburg from Scotland.
Parish was born in 1778 in Hamburg, Germany, the grandson of an English merchant who had transferred his business to Hamburg from Scotland.
Parish emigrated to the United States in 1806, settling first in Philadelphia, then two years later acquired 200,000 acres of land in the Saint Lawrence River Valley to sell as farmland to settlers. Further adding to his holdings he profited greatly from arranging a large shipment of gold and silver bullion from Mexico to Napoleon’s France. He played a major role in the development of Saint Lawrence and Jefferson counties in northern New York state, where he made his home in Ogdensburg and built a blast furnace at Rossie.
The town of Parishville is named for him.
Historian Allan Taylor asserts that for that support, indispensable with Congress unwilling to raise taxes to fund the conflict, Parish gained the political leverage to insist on neutrality for the Saint Lawrence Valley and peace negotiations with the British. Despite the strategic military importance of the Saint Lawrence Valley, the United States made only one half-hearted and disastrous attempt, in November 1813, to use it as an invasion corridor to attack Montreal and cut off the supply route from Lower to Upper Canada.
The rest of the time, American and British interests continued their thriving transborder trade and generally peaceful relations as if there were no war between their countries, a fact Taylor attributes to Parish and his supporters and agents in the valley. Throughout the war, the focus of United States military operations on land continued to be western Lake Ontario and the strategically marginal Niagara Peninsula.
Because of an Austrian bank fraud he lost his fortune and, in 1826, was found drowned in the Danube River.
Parish was the basis for a character in the novel Anthony Adverse by Hervey Allen.