Following his retirement from Congress, Harper continued in the manufacture of brick, and branched out into real estate speculation and urban development. He bought the north side of Philadelphia's then undeveloped Rittenhouse Square and built a fine house for himself at 1811 Walnut Street around 1840. His mansion set a patrician residential tone for the square and he sold off the remaining lots at profit. The front part of his house, sold after his death to the Social Art Club, an exclusive men's club that renamed itself the Rittenhouse Club,[5] still stands behind the 1901 façade that the club added.[6]
In Philadelphia, Harper was a member of the Board of Guardians of the Poor and of the Board of Prison Inspectors.[1] A patron of science, Harper was one of the founders of the Franklin Institute in 1824,[7] and a delegate to the Great Exhibition of the Works of Industry of all Nations, often called the Crystal Palace Exhibition in London in 1851.
The Harper, a 24-story luxury apartment[8] and Harper's Garden, a bar and restaurant, both in the Rittenhouse Square neighborhood of Philadelphia, were named in his honor.[9]
Of his ten children, eight survived to adulthood and several of those entered public life: Alexander J. Harper was President of the Philadelphia City Council, Benjamin West Harper (named after Charlotte Harper's relative Benjamin West) was a businessman and lieutenant colonel in the Pennsylvania National Guard, and Thomas Scott Harper was a physician and president of the Medical Board of Philadelphia.[10]
Citations
^ abc"Harper, James 1780-1873". www.bioguide.congress.gov. Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. Retrieved February 23, 2022.
^Burke, Bobbye and Trina Vaux (1985). Historic Rittenhouse, a Philadelphia Neighborhood. Philadelphia: U of Pennsylvania, 1985. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.