Peter Bent Brigham was born 4 February 1807 in Bakersfield, Vermont as the seventh of nine children born to Uriah Brigham and Elizabeth Brigham. Brigham was a direct descendant of Thomas Brigham, an early immigrant to Cambridge, Massachusetts, as well as John Bent a founder of Sudbury, Massachusetts. Brigham had little formal schooling and went to find work in Boston his early teens, when his father died. He began his career working on Middlesex Canal boats, selling fish and oysters in Boston. He never married.
Career in Boston
Brigham owned a restaurant on the corner of Hanover and Court Streets in Boston, Massachusetts, which he operated until it was sold in 1869 due to a street widening project. He was an astute and financially successful real estate investor. He chose not to run for any public office in Boston. Brigham was one of the founding directors of the Fitchburg Railroad and continued his work with the railroad until his death. Peter Bent Brigham died at his home at the northeast corner of Bulfinch and Allston Streets on Beacon Hill in Boston on 24 May 1877. He is buried at Mount Auburn Cemetery in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Legacy and endowments
Brigham never married, and had no children. He regretted his lack of education, which motivated his bequests to improve the educational opportunities in his hometown of Bakersfield, resulting in the founding of Brigham Academy. The terms of his will also specified that $1,300,000 was to be spent 25 years after his death, for a hospital "for the care of sick persons in indigent circumstances". The money appreciated to $2,000,000 by 1902. It was used to establish the Peter Bent Brigham Hospital,, which opened in 1913, and became a world-renowned medical research hospital affiliated with Harvard Medical School. Brigham's nephew, Robert Breck Brigham, was also a restaurateur and successful businessman. He followed his uncle's example by endowing the Robert Breck Brigham Hospital to serve patients with arthritis and other debilitating joint diseases, which opened in 1914. The two Brigham hospitals merged with Boston Hospital for Women in 1981, and are now known as the Brigham and Women's Hospital.