In 1816, he served as the
supercargo of the ship
Friendship, owned by Waite and Pierce, his sister-in-law's father's company. He traveled to
Lisbon,
Portugal, and
Kolkata, India, along with several other destinations. Following his time on the
Friendship, he embarked on one journey upon the
Tartar. He then partnered with Nathaniel Rogers and his second oldest brother, John Wittingham Rogers, to form the Rogers Brothers company. Their company employed the ships the
Tybee,
Clay,
Grotius,
Augustus,
Quill, and
Charles Daggett. The brothers pioneered the
Zanzibar and
New Holland trades, and had their ships collectively travel over 120 times around
Cape Horn and
Cape of Good Hope. Later in life, he served as
supercargo on the ship the
Ianthe, and worked with his brother-in-law, W.D. Pickman.
Political career Rogers was, at certain points of his life, a member of the Common Council of Salem and the Legislature. He however disliked the methods of his colleagues. He was a
Whig, and an enemy of the
Democratic-Republican,
Nathaniel Hawthorne, and was involved with Hawthorne's removal from the Boston Custom House. Hawthorne, in a letter to
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, promised to "immolate" Rogers, along with several other political opponents, if he were successfully removed from his office. It has been suggested that
Roger Chillingworth, a character in Hawthorne's novel
The Scarlet Letter, was based on Rogers. == Personal life ==