Henry Freeman Rice


Henry Freeman "Harry" Rice was an American businessman and silver miner who was a pioneering resident and civic leader in Carson City, Nevada. Early in his career he was associated with the express cargo services in Boston, Massachusetts. He later engaged in coal and transportation businesses in Cleveland, Ohio during the 1840s before moving to Carson City in the early 1850s to engage in silver mining. Although a member of the Democratic Party, he was appointed by President Grant as postmaster of Carson City and Superintendent of the Carson City Mint, and he managed the Wells Fargo and Company office in Carson City.

Early life and early career

Henry Freeman Rice was born 31 July 1818 in Conway, Massachusetts to Stephen Rice and Abigail Freeman Hamilton Rice. Rice began his career in the express cargo and insurance sales businesses in the 1830s in Boston before moving to Cleveland, Ohio in the 1840s with several of his relatives. He married Jennie E. Hume of Maitland, Nova Scotia, Canada on 31 August 1853, and they had one son Harry Hume Rice known as “Lightning Harry” for his skills as an aggressive locomotive engineer with the Virginia and Truckee Railroad.

Life and career in Nevada

Henry Freeman Rice and his family moved to Carson City, Nevada in the early 1850s as silver was being discovered in the Comstock Lode region. While in Carson City, he developed a reputation as an upstanding citizen who was elected as the first mayor of Carson City. Rice also served the superintendent of the Wells Fargo and Company office in Carson City. In December 1865, Rice had been appointed by U.S. Treasury Secretary Hugh McCulloch to be one of the commissioners to oversee the efforts to have a mint established in Nevada’s capital city. Despite being a registered Democrat, President Ulysses S. Grant appointed Rice to be the postmaster of Carson City in 1869, as well as appointing him to be the second superintendent of the Carson City Mint in October 1870. Rice resigned as the superintendent in May 1873 in protest of the firing of two of his most trusted officers at the mint over alleged production of sub-par coinage, and he returned to his position with Wells Fargo. That same year with a partner, Ormsby County Treasurer Henry J. Peters, he incorporated a securities exchange in Carson City.

Later years and death

The poor financial climate of the 1870s caused the failure of Rice's partnership securities brokerage house of Rice & Peters in 1877. Resulting from that calamity, Rice had been in a very depressed state of mind and he had gone to Stockton, California to seek medical treatment. He was reported to have died as a result of an overdose of his medications. Rice was buried in a family plot at Lone Mountain Cemetery in Carson City.

The Rice family relations and genealogy

Rice’s half-brother Harvey Rice was a lawyer and newspaperman in Cleveland. Henry Freeman Rice was a direct patrilineal descendant of Edmund Rice, an English immigrant to Massachusetts Bay Colony, as follows:

Archival collections

Category:Businesspeople from Nevada
Category:American miners
Category:Nevada politicians
Category:American pioneers
Category:United States government officials
Category:1877 deaths
Category:1818 births
Category:Businesspeople from Massachusetts
Category:Businesspeople from Cleveland
Category:Wells Fargo employees
Category:Bankers
Category:Investment bankers