An all-caps design, said to be the first sans-serif typeface released in America, in 1837. [Lawson] Shares some unique qualities with Boston Type Foundry’s other Gothic No. 2, like a ‘G’ with no crossbar, but also differs in other features, like its consistently straight-legged ‘R’.
It was presumably merged into ATF’s various sans-serif offerings when they acquired Boston Type Foundry in 1892. For example, the caps for smaller sizes of Gothic No. 122 are very similar, if not identical.