r>^ .0' , • \ ^\ •\ ,.^>\ ,6 ,v -o V" ^(^ ^\-'. -vV ,-^'' .0- ^■^ ''' J-' •f^'^^ ^^^-^-'-'^ X^v% '-Ji' ■^ c .A--' ■SS" V*- vV ^:.. >, ,/> ,\'- .^' ,0 \ ^.-0- ■te' ■'b y ^-.. . " ^ ■N"' ■• •= b. ' ' . • ,0- . \" ^vS>^j\-. AT ::sK'. -t^ A '^-_- -V w •^■, ^0-/- ^Y ■■■>" - - ■■~y\', y. . ■<"%■ ^ -• ^ r 1' ' ' -1 '-^' > . 1 _, -^' J'- -S" ,^-..:-' *- ,■ ,\" •='. ^ % '-.-^, • •?■' ^ ■ ^^ /. * - ''^^ ,0' • ' ' ' - o ■^ ^: ,^ '^' V:^"";^?-"/'/ •' .v:^^ '--. '-T':^" .0^ . - :■■ •■ ' -.'■■ <;■• ' ■:•.■ :■■■:■ /';, ^.?:i>v: :s :^T ^■£ v; .'vb- .> "'■ ^^^^ ■-'->^- .. %'-■ - .■• • \ . '. o > .^' ' <^:'^,', -^r. -•X V .N'- , r •.-■■\- 1 j , \l- ^ ■ •HS>b<' ,\ \- •. '■ ."1" c V" , \ ,x '^ 'X ■ •■ - .■ •■> V, ,~^' ->•, ■>■, ■f'^ ^. -J ■ ^- '-^-0^ /4bb:j ?r: A o^, :b^Ag- ^.c ■* / ..-■'■ ^ / l-'l. >> •" s . V\ A' ,. -;b';.' v'- ';■ ^ "'Ci^ ■ 0-^V':] '- ,aX , . . "^, t.'^^;- -t-. ■. '■y"lJ ^^ "- :\:..l--' ■ .0 -r,^ • A-v-v - ^- f'J . V' .-•^Ti-^'s ■^'b^'bb ■^ '*"b. b ' '^<^' x^-V. <■■• ' ^b<..> , ,^-" .0 "'-' .x^ . . iv- ,0 V<^ .x- •■^, X- <^, o "-0^ ^•^^.. ,:-^ -b.^-. '- V ,-0' >-b,b', -^A, .-X-' ^ y .; '^:■: b^b-j^ ■■; -^o^ ;A|:A^,b .^^ ^' .' •■V. -/'"^bb,^: .^b<. ::m^^; .o^ :. ■3 ^.V • V-^ .X 1^'" t^^o '^ ^ SW:^' ./^"^^. ''^^'^'' /^' i^j^r\)v. ,0 ^. .0 <=o '<' ^^ ^ ^>^5^-^ ,0 ' "^ A ^^ ' . . ^ ■ aV ^ = - » « >^ ■V^S'-V V-:^'''/ ^c ''--.-v -v. /;«^1"%'. ^°-V The Bucks of Wethersfield Connefticut AND THE FAMILIES WITH WHICH THEY ARE CONNECTED BY MARRIAGE Biographical and Genealogical Sketch Roanoke, Virginia The Stone Printing and Manufacturino Co. 1909 y Buck, who reported cases in 1848 He was led to the adoption of the method liy his own reasoning, not being Rware that it had previously been employed. During a period of eleven months he saw the surpiising number of eight cases. Five of these he scarified, and all of them recovered." [56] BUCKS OF VVETHERSFIELD, CONN. haste to a young Irish laborer in his boarding-house on Fifth Avenue, between 57th and 58th Streets. I found him with impending suffocation from greatly swollen glottis and epiglottis. Recognizing the immediate danger and recollecting the admirable instruction for the relief of this condition which my dear old precep- tor had inculcated, although I was without the proper instruments, I immediatclv scarified with curved, blunt-pointed bistouri the cedematous swellings. This aflforded temporary relief from the suffocation by per- mitting the escape of the serous exudation; but, as the relief was only partial, on account of the extension of the (xdema beyond my reach, I sent a hasty messen- ger for Dr. Buck to come to my assistance armed with the proper instruments both for scarification and for tracheotomy. He came promptly, but in the interim my patient had been rapidly succumbing to his increas- ing impeded respiration. Just as the doctor entered the room the patient fell from his chair to the floor, respiration ceasing. Without a moment's hesitation, Dr. Buck grasped the situation, dropped to his knee beside the prostrate form, and made the opening into the windpipe. No air entering, but bloody serum ex- uding and completely obstructing the entrance of air, the Doctor put his mouth to the opening and sucked out the obstructing bloody serum. Air immediately entered, a gasp followed, then soon another, and breathing was resumed — a life had been saved. [57] BUCKS OF WETHERSFIELD, CONN. "If this was not true heroism, then there is no suit- able term with which to describe such an act at such such imminent peril — not only from possible poison- ing, but also from the threatening attitude of several ignorant companions who were declaring that we had killed their friend. The man having been raised to a sitting posture, tracheal tubes were inserted and se- cured, and respiration was fully established. Under subsequent treatment and care the patient, at the end of about six weeks, had fully recovered and the tra- cheal wound had entirely healed." [Memorandum found among mother's papers after her death.] "The lines transcribed below were taken from a very humorous address prepared by Dr. Pliny Earle, of Northampton, Massachusetts, for the first annual meeting (and dinner) of the newly formed 'Society in Behalf of Widows and Orphans of Medical Men,' which took place — so far as I can remember — in No- vember, 1837. On reaching New York City, Dr. Earle went at once to the Astor House, where the Committee of Arrangements had given rendez-vous to their guests from out of the city. Dr. Earle, on show- ing the paper which he had prepared for the occasion, — an address to the unmarried medical men of the Association — to have it approved or criticized, was soon informed of his mistake in regard to Dr. Gurdon [58] BUCKS OF WETHERSFIELD, CONN. Buck, who had been married for some time. He then retired for a short time in an adjoining room, and very successfully repaired his mistake, as may be seen by the accompanying extract. — (Monsieur Louis Agassiz, who had just landed on our shores, coming to settle in Harvard, as Professor of Natural History, etc., was an unexpected but most welcome guest at this medical gathering.)" "Let sage Agassiz, with his wondrous store Of treasured truths in zoologic lore. Inform us, as all eloquent he can, If it conforms to Nature's general plan That, roaming lonely through the world should go One solitary Buck without its doe. "The game has dodged my shot: mistaken elf, I thought my friend was lonely as myself; But, since those lines were penned, I have heard it said That for this Buck the doe was long since bred. Beyond the vineyards and the plains of France, Where Switzer paysannes o'er the vintage dance. Where lakes and ladies' eyes are bright and clear. There this good trapper, in his love's career. Caught for his doe a Wolff, which now he calls a dear. Would that all Buck-tales came to such an end! Would that all single bucks would hence attend! Follow his path, e'en to its glorious close. Keep wide awake a while; then take their does. But let us pass, friend Buck no longer heeded, Since we have learned, for him no doe is needed." [59] BUCKS OF W E T H E R S F 1 E L D, CONN [Editorial notice in the Medical Gazette, of New York, February, 1858.] "Newspapers having announced and commented upon an operation lately performed by Dr. Gurdon Buck upon a young lady of this city, it would seem proper that we should put our readers in possession of the facts, in anticipation of the detailed report, which will doubtless be forthcoming in the medical journals in due time, by authority. The case is one of very great professional interest on several accounts, and its suc- cessful result will add another laurel to the wreath which Dr. Buck has won for New York surgery. "The lady, some two years since, had a small fish bone lodged in her throat, in the act of swallowing, which she could feel with her finger, though, not being visible, it could not be extracted at the time. At first it occasioned but little inconvenience, but, later, either its presence or the wound which if had inflicted pro- duced so much irritation at times, extending to the larynx and trachea, as to become afflictive and even haz- ardous, by reason of the paroxysmal recurrence of in- tense laryngismus, sometimes endangering life. The patient being nearly connected with the families of several of our most eminent physicians, her case en- listed the counsel of several of our distinguished sur- geons, and of other medical men, by whom the expe- dient of tracheotomy was several times proposed, but as often delayed, a mitigation of symptoms having been [60] BUCKS OF W E T H E R S F I E L D, CONN. obtained by antispasmodics and other medication. Of late, however, the dangerous symptoms having recurred more frequently and suflfocation threatening, the neces- sity of some operation became imperative; and, after full consultation and the heroic consent of the patient, Dr. Gurdon Buck, on the loth of January, performed it as the dernier ressort, to avert the fatal result which was impending. Among the surgeons present were Dr. Alexander Stevens, Dr. Willard Parker, and Dr. John Watson, and with them were the physicians in attendance — Dr. Alonzo Clark, Dr. Cammann, and Dr. Joseph Mather Smith. "The operation was undertaken, first, for the re- moval of the foreign body, but also because it was neces- sary to relieve the patient's suffering. The larynx was laid open, the patient being etherized, and a protracted and diligent search was made in vain, no trace of the fish bone being discovered; but the area of inflamed and ulcerated mucous membrane in the larynx and trachea was exposed to view and cauterized. Then, finally, the artificial tube was introduced, to the manifest relief of the sufferer, whose powers of endurance— for it had been found necessary to suspend the ether — were mar- velous. On the following day the wound was opened, and, for the second time, a most careful search for the foreign body was made, but in vain. The parts were then coapted, the tube replaced, and the wound fully dressed. [61] BUCKS OF WETHERSFIELD, CONN. "From that time to the present all has gone well; the wound healed by first intention, there has been no recurrence of the laryngismus, and all the sufi'erings of the patient have been relieved. The perforated tube, however, is still worn, and the patient has recov- ered her voice and speech. Her health also, which had been greatly shattered, is rapidly being restored. Whether the fish bone remains imbedded in any of the tissues, which is possible, or whether it has escaped after inflicting so great an amount of misery, are ques- tions which it is now impossible to answer with pos- itiveness. But the operation has succeeded in rescuing from sufYering and death a young wife and mother, and in restoring her to her husband, children, and an endeared family circle, at the head of which stands one of our most esteemed physicians. She will be a living trophy of the science and skill of Dr. Buck, of the New York Hospital, who has already distinguished himself, in this department of surgery, beyond any living man at home or abroad." [E.xtract from the obituary notice of Dr. Gurdon Buck, published in the Medical Record, of New York, on March loth, 1877.] "As a surgeon, Dr. Buck was remarkable for bold- ness in operating and for thoroughness of detail in after-treatment. His patient study of his cases was one of his peculiar traits. To cases of fractures he was [62] BUCKS OF WETHERSFIELD, CONN. particularly attentive, spending not infrequently the greater part of the day in the wards of the New York Hospital in dressing them. As a result of such pains- taking effort he was enabled to revolutionize the pre- vailing system of treatment. ****** Dr. Buck was not only a bold, but an original operator. The various capital operations which are described in the periodical medical literature of the past thirty-five years abundantly prove the latter statement. Among these, what is now known as Buck's operation for oede- ma of the glottis holds a deservedly high rank. But in no department did he gain more laurels than in auto- plastic surgery. His devotion to this branch, during the latter part of his life, amounted to a passion, and his marvelous successes roused in him an enthusiasm which mocked the increasing infirmities of his age and his rapidly declining health. His work on 'Contri- butions to Reparative Surgery,' issued only within the last year, fully embodies his remarkable experience, and may be looked upon as the crowning effort of a most notable and distinguished career." List of Articles and Monographs Published by Dr. Gurdon Buck. I. Researches on Hernia Cerebri, following injuries of the head. — New York Journal of Medicine and Surgery, Vol. H, 1840. [63] BUCKS OF W E T H E R S F I E L D , CONN. 2. Excision of the Elbow Joint, in a case of Suppur- ation and Caries of the Bones; A case of Anchy- losis of the Knee Joint, etc. — New York Journal of Medicine and Surgery, Vol. IV, 1841. 3. The Knee Joint Anchylosed at a Right Angle; Restored nearly to a straight position, after the excision of a wedge-shaped portion of bone con- sisting of the patella, condyles, and articular surface of the tibia. — American Journal of the Medical Sciences, 1845. 4. Oedematous Laryngitis (with plates showing instruments and operation). — On the Anatom- ical Structure of the Genito-Urinary Organs. — Transactions of .American Medical Association, Vol. I, 1848. 5. Six Additional Cases of Oedematous Laryngitis, Successfully Treated by Scarification of the Epi- glottis. — Transactions of American Medical Association, Vo]. IV, 1851. 6. A Case of Croup; Tracheotomy Successfully Performed. — Transactions of Academy of Med- icine of New York, Vol. I, 1851. 7. Surgical Treatment of Morbid Growths within the Larynx. — Transactions of American Medi- cal Association, Vol. VI, 1853. 8. Badly-United Fractures of the Thigh; Cases Il- lustrating Treatment [Refracture]. — Trans- actions of Academy of Medicine of New York, 1855- 9. A Case of Deep Wound of the Parotid Region, in which Ligatures were Simultaneously Ap- plied to the Common and Internal Carotid [64] BUCKS OF WETHERSFIELD, CONN. Arteries. — New York Medical Times, Novem- ber, 1855. 10. Post-Fascial Abscess, Originating in the Iliac Fossa, with a New Method of Treatment. — New York Journal of Medicine, 1857. 11. Case of Aneurism of the Femoral Artery, for which Ligatures were Successfully Applied to the Femoral, Profunda, External and Common Iliacs^a case that occurred in the New York. Hospital. — New York Journal of Medicine, 1858. 12. Tracheotomy Performed for Oedema of the Larynx. — New York Journal of Medicine, 1859. 13. Improved Method of Treating Fractures of the Thigh. [Illustrated; also table of statistics.] Transactions of Academy of Medicine of New York, 1 86 1. 14. The Operation for Strangulated Hernia, with- out Opening the Sac. — Bulletin of the Academy of Medicine of New York, February, 1863. 15. Strangulated Inguinal Interstitial Hernia; Tes- ticle retained in Inguinal Canal. Operation; death. — New York Medical Record, July, 1869. 16. Lithotomy and Lithotrity. — Transactions of State Medical Society of New York, 1869. 17. A Contribution to the Surgical Therapeutics of the Air Passages. — Transactions of the Academy of Medicine of New York, 1870. 18. Femoral Aneurism in the Groin, Successfully Treated by Flexion of the Limb, After a Relapse Following a Previous Apparent Cure by Com- [65] BUCKS OF W E T H E R S F I E L D, CONN. pression. — American Journal of the Medical Sciences, ]zn\xd.Ty, 1870. 19. A Case of Oedema Glottidis in which a Patient was Resuscitated by the Operation of Trache- otomy After Respiration had Ceased. — New York Medical Record, October, 1870. 20. A Case of Strangulated Hernia of the Tunica Vaginalis of Rare Variety. Operation; gan- grene; death. — American Journal of the Medi- cal Sciences, 187 1. 21. A Biographical Sketch of the Late Dr. Thomas Cock. — Transactions of the State Medical So- ciety of New York, 1 87 1. 22. On Abscesses originating in the Right Iliac Fossa; with table of statistics. — Transactions of the Academy of Medicine of New York, 1876. 23. Perityphlitic Abscess in the Ileo-caecal Region. — New York Medical Record, 1876. 24. Migration of Pus. — Richmond and Louisville Medical Journal, March, 1876. 25. Contributions to Reparative Surgery. — D. Apple- ton & Co., 1876. (Pp. 237.) [66] BUCKS OF WETHERSFIELD, CONN. PART III. REMINISCENCES OF REV. PHILIPPE WOLFF. (Mother's only Brother.) In 1892, Uncle Philippe, at my request, wrote down as many of the incidents of his father's military life as he could recall. I have arranged the more important of these incidents in their chronological order, and have transcribed them in very nearly the same lan- guage as that in which they were written. The few alterations which I have permitted myself to make in the text affect the form but not the sense of his statements. Causes which led to My Father's Entrance into THE Army at a very Early Age. My grandfather, the Kapellmeister, was a citizen of Landau (a walled fortress town then in the posses- sion of France). At the revolution (1792) he became a staunch partisan of the Republic, but was opposed to excess and terrorism. He was denounced as an aristocrat. A friendly Jacobin warned him that the Club in secret session had decided to send him forth- [67] BUCKS OF WETHERSFIELD, CONN. with to the guillotine, and that in the night his house would be surrounded.' Early in the evening he made his escape, passing through a gate of the fortress in the disguise of a peasant returning from market. He made straight for the army on the frontier — the only safe resort for a patriot who would not become an emigre. (His age was then forty-nine.) Once in safety he ordered his three sons, all minors, to join him and enlist as volunteers. Hence their early military career. Only the two younger sons, however, joined their father. The older son, Louis, took a more independent course, entered the naval service and trained at Saint- Malo, in France. He was a fine athlete and an unri- valled swimmer. From the proceeds of the prizes which he captured while serving in the navy he pur- chased a plantation in the Island of Mauritius, and eventually amassed a large fortune. In 1810, however, the English sent a powerful expedition to Mauritius and put an end to the French rule in the island. Louis Wolff passed in the night in a small boat through the British fleet and landed at Mozambique, but he soon afterward died there of a fever. The English confis- cated his real estate in Mauritius; his movable property went to a Miss Pajol (of Port Louis, Mauritius), to whom he was engaged to be married. 'The infamous Sohneidcr, who traveled over the e.istern part of France with a com- pletely outfitted guillotine and executed in this manner scores, if not hundreds, of the country's hest citizens, is known to have heen in the neighborhood of Landau at this very period. — A. H, IJ. [68] bucks of wethersfield, conn. Incident Illustrative of General Pichegru's Character. In 1794 and 1795 my father was with General Pichegru when he conquered both Belgium and Hol- land. Pichegru made him his confidential secretary/ He usually slept in the tent of the General and had charge of all his correspondence/ During this campaign, there occurred a very strik- ing incident, which I will relate. Pichegru was driv- ing before him the British army, under the command of the Duke of York. One morning there was a very thick fog, and some of the retreating British lost their way. The French were following in their track at the time, but — as they thought— at some distance behind them. A company of infantry was in advance *At iirst, he must have been simply one of Pichcgni's assistant stxrirlaries, for in 1793 grandfather was only sixteen years old. And yet one of his immediate predecessors in this position— Charles Nodier, who later in life became famous as a writer — was, at the time of his appointment, only fifteen years old. Alexandre Dumas, in one of his historical novels, gives quite a detailed account of Nodier*s experiences while serving as one of Pichegru's assistant secretaries. — A. H. B. 'It does not appear, in any part of these detached reminiscences, at what dale the two Wolff brothers became leaders of military bands. I*resumably, when they first entered the army, they were simple privates in the musical corps; and yet, after the lapse of so short a period as two years, the younger brother — my grandfather, Albert Henri Wolff — appears to have been assigned to duties entirely distinct from those of a musician. I called my mother's attention to this matter, and she replied that her father possessed certain traits of character and certain little accomplish- ments (his handwriting was in bold characters and easily legible, and he was a fairly good draughtsman) which led to his being fre years, and his wife, Sarah Buck, died November 19, 1828, aged 74 years. GURDON Buck, son of Daniel and Sarah Buck, married SUSANNAH, daughter of David Mawvaring, of New London and New York, April 20, 1805. Died August 4, 1852. His remains and the remains of his wife are buried in the Auchincloss lot at Woodlawn Cemetery, New York City. Their children: — - [86] BUCKS OF W E T H E R S F I E L D, CONN. David, born January 29, 1806; died August 15, 1875, at Marblehead, Massachusetts. Gordon, born May 4, 1807; died March 6, 1877, at New York. Charles Dudley, born November 29, 1808; died September 30, 1870, at Orange, New Jersey. Daniel Winthrop, born November 27, 1810; died March 4, 1832, at Sainte Croix, West Indies. Sarah, born December 28, 1812; died December, 1855, in Brooklyn, New York. Edward, born October 6, 18 14; died July 16, 1876, at Andover, Massachusetts. Elizabeth, born November 16, 18 16; died October 26, 1902, at New York. Rebecca Coit, born November i, 1818; died July 18, 1870, at Rye Beach, New Hampshire. George, born August 14, 1821; died 1824, in New York. Henry, born November 25, 1824; died September 9, 183 1, in New York. David, the oldest son of Gurdon and Susannah Manwaring Buck, married Matilda Stewart Hall (born August 19, 1812), of Boston, May 8, 1837. Their children: — Florence, born July 15, 1839; died August 18, 1864. Stuart Manwaring, born October 24, 1842; now in West Virginia. Agnes, born and died December 7, 1847. [87] BUCKS OF WETHERSFIELD, CONN. Eleanor, born May 24, 1850; lives in Boston, Massa- chusetts. Henry Hall, born March 11, 1854; lives in Boston. Howard Mendenhall, born May 16, 1856; lives in Boston. Stuart Manwaring, oldest son of David and Ma- tilda S. Buck, married Grace Ross, of Bangor, Maine, October 30, 1872. Grace Ross was born April 8, 1849. Their children : — Clififord Ross, born February 12, 1874. Married Gertrude Jane Nelson. Issue: John Nelson Buck, born April 9, 1906. _ . ( Catherine, born October 27, 1877. [ Frances, born and died the same day. Theda, born July 31, 1879. Matilda, widow of David Buck, aged (1908) over 95 years, is living at No. 127 Marlborough Street, Boston. Her health is said to be very good for one of her age, and her mind remains as active and clear as it ever was. GURDON Buck, second son of Gurdo. md Susan- nah Manwaring Buck, married Henriette i^l.S.^BETH Wolff, daughter of Albert Henri Wolfif, of Geneva, Switzerland, July 27, 1836. Their children: — Amelia Henrietta, born February 11, 1838; died 1900. [88] BUCKS OF WETHERSFIELD, CONN. Susan Manwaring, born November i, 1839; lives abroad. Louisa Monsell, born September 9, 1841 ; died December 4, 1841. Albert Henry, born October 20, 1842; lives in New York. Alfred Linsly, born November 8, 1844; ^^^^ Febru- ary 10, 1848. Gurdon Saltonstall, born October 23, 1848; lives in New York; is a bachelor. Francis Dudley, born October 11, 1850; lives in New York. Gurdon Buck died, in New York, March 6, 1877, aged nearly 70 years. His widow, Henriette E. Buck, died September 20, 1899, aged nearly 90 years. Amelia Henrietta, the oldest daughter of Gurdon and Henriette E. Buck, married Alfred North, M. D., the leading surgeon of Waterbury, Connecticut, Sep- tember 24, 1863. Their children: — Helen Winthrop, born July 4, 1867; died Novem- ber 27, 187c . HenrieuJ Dudley, born June 24, 1870; died Sep- tember 21, 1870. Susie Saltonstall, born September 24, 1871, married Herbert S. Rowland, and lives in Waterbury, Connec- ticut. Their children are: Alfred North Rowland, [89J BUCKS OF WETHERSFIELD, CONN. born January i6, 1900, and Helen Rowland, born in 1902. Annie Wetmore, born May 16, 1873 ; lives in Water- bury, Connecticut. Gurdon Buck, born November 6, 1874; died the same week. Albert Henry Buck, oldest son of Gurdon and Henriette E. Buck, married LAURA S. ABBOTT, daugh- ter of Rev. John S. C. Abbott, then of New Haven, Connecticut. Their children : — - Winifred, born January 2, 1872. Harold Winthrop, born May 7, 1873. Francis Dudley Buck, youngest son of Gurdon and Henriette E. Buck, married Clara Tillou, March 19, 1872. Clara T. Buck, his wife, died January 19, 1873. Their child: — Francis Tillou, born January 11, 1873, married (1906) Neva Ten Broeck, and lives in Nyack, N. Y. Their child, born October 1906: Anna Ten Broeck Buck. In June, 1875, Francis D. Buck married Anna Tillou, sister of Clara, his first wife. No children. Charles Dudley Buck, third son of Gurdon and Susannah Manwaring Buck, married Sophronia Smith, [90] BUCKS OF W E T H E R S F I E L D, CONN. of Wilbraham, Massachusetts, September i8, 1844. Their children: — Charles Gurdon, born April 13, 1847; lives at San Rafael, California. Grace Winthrop, born July 20, 185 1; married Greenwood K. Oliver; died in Boston, Massachusetts. One daughter, Edith. Margaret Warriner, born April 29, 1857; lives in California with her brother, Charles G. Buck. Sarah Buck, oldest daughter of Gurdon and Susan- nah Manwaring Buck, married Jonathan D. Steele, of New York (as his second wife). Their children: — William Dayton, born June 30, 185 1. James Alexander, born July 15, 1853; married Helen E. Hand, of Brooklyn, N. Y., in 1886, and lives in New York. Their child: Winthrop Steele, born August 26, 1888. Jonathan D. Steele died in Brooklyn, New York, August 25, 1872. Sarah, his wife, died in December, 1855- Edward Buck, the fifth son of Gurdon and Susan- nah Manwaring Buck, married Elizabeth G. Hubbard (born February 11, 1817), June 8, 1841. Their chil- dren : — Helen Alice (always spoken of as Alice), born April 3, 1842; lived in Andover, Massachusetts, up to the time of her death, March 29, 1907. [91 J BUCKS OF WETHERSFIELD, CONN. A baby boy, born June 26, 1845; died in infancy. Walter, born September 29, 1847; married Mary Westcott Laurie in 1888, and lives in Andover, Massa- chusetts. No children. Edward Buck died in Andover, Massachusetts, July 16, 1876, in his sixty-second year. Elizabeth, his wife, died at the same place on May 14, 1890. Elizabeth Buck, the second daughter of Gurdon and Susannah Manwaring Buck, married John Auch- incloss, of New York, June 3, 1835. Their children : — Henry Buck, born June 7, 1836; lived in New York until 1904, when impaired health compelled him to move to Redlands, California. Sarah Ann, born July 8, 1838; married James Coats (created a baronet in 1905), the thread manufacturer, of Paisley, Scotland, in 1859; died in June, 1887, in Providence, Rhode Island. John Stuart, born March, 1840; died March, 1842. William Stuart, born March 19, 1842. Elizabeth Ellen (always spoken of as Ellie), born July 3, 1844; lives in New York. Edgar Stirling, born September 29, 1847; died in 1892. Frederic Lawton, born February 26, 1851 ; died in Yokohama, Japan, November 18, 1878. John Winthrop, born April 12, 1853; lives in New York. [92] BUCKS OF W E T H E R S F I E L D, CONN. Hugh Dudley, born July 8, 1858; lives in New York. John Auchincloss died June 26, 1876, while on a fishing expedition in the Canada Woods. Elizabeth, his wife, died October 26, 1902, in New York.' Daniel Buck, second son of Daniel and Sarah Buck, married Julia, daughter of Stephen Mix Mitchell, of Wethersfield, Connecticut, October 14, 1805. No children. Mrs. Julia Buck died October 9, 1807, aged 27. Daniel Buck married (second time) Elizabeth Belden, daughter of Ezekiel Porter Belden, of Weth- ersfield, January 30, 1812. Their children: — Daniel, born February 26, 18 14; at last accounts (1904) he was alive and well at his home in San Fran- cisco, California. Ezekiel, born January 31, 1816; died (unmarried) March 21, 1844. Charles, born Dec. 26, 1817; died August 28, 1845. Julia, born July 16, 1820; did not marry. John, born December 16, 1822; died March 21, 1847. Susan, born March 3, 1825; did not marry. Daniel Buck resided in Hartford and carried on business for many years with his brother Dudley, under the firm name of Daniel Buck & Co. He died Janu- 'The continuation of the Auchincloss genealogy will be found on page 120. [93] BUCKS OF W E T H E R S F 1 E L D, CONN. ary 15, i860, aged 80 years and 3 months. Elizabeth, his wife — "Aunt Betsy," as she was always called by the Bucks of later generations — died March 3, 1887, in the 104th year of her age, at Wethersfield, Connecticut. Charles Buck, the third son of Daniel and Sarah Saltonstall Buck, married Catherine P. Bradford, of New York, March 17, 1813. No children. He died in Wethersfield June 5, 1858. Winthrop Buck, the fourth son of Daniel and Sarah Saltonstall Buck, married Eunice W. Parsons, daugh- ter of Gideon Parsons, of Amherst, Massachusetts, January 29, 1812. No children. Mrs. Eunice W. Buck died August (;, 1812, aged 24 years. Winthrop Buck married (second time) Eunice Moseley, daughter of Abner Moseley, M. D., of Wethersfield, Connecticut, December 28, 1814. Their children : — Martha Ann, born November 26, 181 5; did not marry. Died August 12, 1900. Winthrop, born December 16, 1816; died in 1900. Eunice, born December 31, 1819; did not marry. Maria, born January 30, 1821; married E. G. Howe, Esq., of Hartford. No children. Robert, born March 8, 1823. Roswell Riley, born October 21, 1826; died in 1904. Kate Moseley, born February i, 1833. [94] BUCKS OF WETHERSFIELD, CONN. Henry, born December 6, 1834; married Theresa Robinson, November 30, 1875. Issue: (i) Henry Rob- inson Buck, born September 14, 1876; married (1901) Mary L., daughter of Charles Wolcott, of Wethers- field. They have one son, Henry W., born May 15, 1903. (2) John Saltonstall Buck, born May 7, 1879; married Florence E., daughter of Rev. George L. Clark, of Wethersfield. They have two children — one son, Richard Saltonstall, born August 10, 1906, and one daughter, Eleanor K., born February 12, 1909. (3) Charles Hone Buck, born August 2, 188 1 ; to be mar- ried, June, 1909, to Eunice C, daughter of Rev. John Barstow, of Lee, Massachusetts. Henry Buck and his wife live in the old homestead at Wethersfield. Winthrop Buck died August 19, 1862, aged 77 years, 8 months; Eunice, his wife, died August 24, 1862, aged 68 years, 10 months. Dudley Buck, the youngest son of Daniel and Sarah Saltonstall Buck, married Hetty G. Hempsted, daugh- ter of John Hempsted, of Hartford (and granddaugh- ter of Joshua and Ann Hempsted), September 25, 1827. Their children: — George, born September 16, 1830. Mary, born September 8, 1832; died August 3, 1833. Dudley, born June 5, 1834; died November 20, 1836. Mrs. Hetty G. Buck died, probably, in 1836. [95] BUCKS OF WETHERSFIELD, CONN Dudley Buck married (the second time) Martha C. Adams, daughter of Nathaniel Adams, of Portsmouth, New Hampshire, September 12, 1837. Their chil- dren: — Dudley, born March 10, 1839; lives in Brooklyn, New York. He has acquired a great reputation as a musical composer. James, born November 17, 1840; died July 20, 1842. Dudley Buck, the father, died in May, 1867, aged 77 years, 11 months. Martha C, his wife, died Febru- ary 20, 1864, aged 65 years. Winthrop Buck, oldest son of Winthrop and Eunice Moseley Buck, married Charlotte Woodhouse, daugh- ter of Sylvester Woodhouse, December 24, 1845. Their children : — Edward Winthrop, born February 28, 1847; lives in Wethersfield, Connecticut. Is married and has three children: (i) Edward Winthrop, (2) Edward Os- borne, and (3) Ellen Dudley. The older son, Edward Winthrop, married Cora S. Denison, of Saybrook, Con- necticut. They have one child, Catherine Denison, born July 25, 1908. Louis Dudley, born August 13, 1850; lives in Wethersfield, Connecticut. Married Laura Church, and they have two children living: (i) Charlotte, and (2) Mary Church. A third daughter, Louise Dudley, died in 1897. [96] BUCKS OF WETHERSFIELD, CONN. Robert Buck, second son of Winthrop and Eunice Moseley Buck, married, at Hastings, Minnesota, De- cember 25, 1857, Lucinda M. Emerson, who died June 7, 1859. He married, the second time, at St. Albans, Vermont, Helen Frances Jones, August 5, i860. Their child:— Robert Moseley, born September 5, 1865. Maria Buck, the third daughter of Winthrop and Eunice Moseley Buck, married Edmund G. Howe, of Hartford, Connecticut, February 5, 1856. No chil- dren. Mr. Howe died April 23, 1872, aged 64 years. Kate Moseley Buck, the youngest daughter of Winthrop and Eunice Moseley Buck, married John Buckingham, of Chicago, Illinois, November 6, 1866. Their children: — Henry Winthrop, born November 28, 1868. Arthur Hale, born October 27, 1870; died August 3, 1871. Clifford Hale, born January i, 1876. Roswell Riley Buck, third son of Winthrop and Eunice Moseley Buck, married Maria Catherine Barnes, daughter of Josiah Barnes, M. D., of Buffalo, New York, November 8, 1866. Their children: — Harriet Moseley, born August 16, 1867. Winthrop Seymour, born May 13, 1870; died May, 1878. [97] BUCKS OF WETHERSFIELD, CONN George Sturgis, born February lo, 1875. Henry Buck, youngest son of Winthrop and Eunice Moseley Buck, married Theresa Robinson, daughter of George Robinson, of Wethersfield, Connecticut, November 30, 1875. (Further details are given above.) George Buck, oldest son of Dudley and Hetty G. Buck, of Hartford, Connecticut, married Lucy Farrar Hall, daughter of Rev. Richard Hall, of New Ipswich, New Hampshire, September 8, 1853. Their chil- dren: — Horace Hall, Mary Eliza, Lucy Farrar, Mary Eliza, and George Dudley. Dudley Buck (the musical composer), the son of Dudley and Martha C. Buck, of Hartford, Connecti- cut, married Lizzie Van Wagener, of Burlington, New Jersey, October 3, 1865. Their children: — Edward Terry, Dudley, and Madelaine. [OS] BUCKS OF WETHERSFIELD, CONN EARLIER SALTONSTALL GENEALOGY. (Record Defective at Many Points.) Thos. DE SALTONSTALL (Name of wife not known.) (12S0-70) Richard Saltonstall (Name of wife not known.) (1376) Richard Saltonstall (1475) (Name of wife not known.) Gilbert Saltonstall (Nameof wife not known.) ( 1507^ Richard Saltonstall Richard Saltonstall Gilbert Saltonstall Died 1598. Samuel Saltonstall [99] BUCKS OF WETHERSFIELD, CONN. LATER SALTONSTALL GENEALOGY. Samuel Saltonstall Died 1612. Sir Richard Saltonstall Grace Kaye Born 1586. Died 16S8. (Came to America in 1630.) Richard Saltonstall '^d. i633) Muriel Gurdon Born 1610. Died 1694. Nathaniel Saltonstall ("id. i663) Elizabeth Ward Born 1639. Died 1707. Gurdon Saltonstall' Elizabeth Rosewell Born 1656. Died 17w4. ^See Scheme on page 103 for origin of the name GURDON. (Governor of Connecticut from 1708 to 1724.) Gen. Gurdon Saltonstall Rebecca Winthrop Born 1708." (Daughter of John Winthrop.) Died 1785. Sarah Saltonstall Daniel Buck aflJ Of Wetherslield, Conn. Martha Saltonstall David Manwaring Of New London, Conn. [100] BUCKS OF WETHERSFIELD, CONN. FURTHER DETAILS OF THE SALTONSTALL GENEALOGY. Gen. Gurdon Saltonstall, of New London, Connec- ticut, married Rebecca Winthrop, daughter of John Winthrop (Governor of Connecticut), March 15, 1733. Their children: — Gurdon, born December 15, 1733; died July 18, 1762, at Jamaica, W. L He was never married. Rebecca, born December 31, 1734; died in New York. She married David Mumford, of New London, Connecticut, January i, 1758. Katherine, born February 17, 1736; died March 30, 1 82 1, in Wethersfield. She married John Richards, of Wethersfield. No children. Winthrop, born June 10, 1737; died in New Lon- don, in 181 1. He married Ann Wanton, daughter of Governor Wanton, of Rhode Island. Dudley, born September 8, 1738; died at St. Dom- ingo, W. I. He married Frances Babcock. Ann, born February 29, 1740; date of death un- known. She married Thomas Mumford, of Norwich, Connecticut. No children. Roswell, born August 29, 1741 ; date of death un- known. He married Elizabeth Stewart, March 4, 1764. Elizabeth, born June 12, 1742-3; died June 9, 1777, [101] BUCKS OF WETHERSFIELD, CONN in Wethersfield. She married Silas Dean (orDeane), of Wethersfield. Mary, born March 28, 1744; died August 14, 1820, in New Haven, Connecticut. She married Josiah (or Jeremiah) Atwater, of New Haven, December 19, 1797. Richard, born January i, 1747; lost at sea on his way to the island of Martinique, W. I. Was not mar- ried. Martha, born October 8, 1748; died October 16, 1823, in New York. She married David Manwaring, of New London, Connecticut, January 15, 1767. The list of their children is given on another page. Henrietta, born March 19, 1750; died May 25, 1807, in New Haven, Connecticut. She married John Still Miller, of New Haven. Gilbert, born February 27, 1752; died in 1797 in New York. He married Harriet Babcock, March 27, 1786. Sarah, born June 17, 1754; died November 19, 1828, in Wethersfield. She married Daniel Buck, of Weth- ersfield, Connecticut, December 3, 1775. The list of their children is given on page 86. Gen. Gurdon Saltonstall died September 19, 1785. Rebecca Winthrop, his wife, died October 30, 1776. [102] BUCKS OF WETHERS FIELD, CONN. ORIGIN AND ANCESTRY OF THE GURDON FAMILY. [From Burke's "Landed Gentry" and "Commoners of England."] This family came into England with the Conqueror, from Gourdon, near Cahors, on the borders of Peri- gord, and the name is on the roll of Battell Abbey. Sir Adam de Gurdon, Knight banneret, living in the time of Henry III, was, in that monarch's reign, Bailiff of Alton, but was outlawed for treason and re- bellion, as one of the Montford faction. He was re- stored, however, upon the accession of Edward, and constituted Keeper of the Forest of Wolmer. He married, first, CONST.ANTLA, daughter and heir- ess of Thomas Makarel, of Selborne County, South- ampton. Sir Adam married a second wife, Almerla, from whom he was divorced after having had two sons, the elder of whom was seated in Wiltshire; the younger settled himself in London. These sons appear to have been disinherited, for their father had a third wife, Agnes, and by her a daughter, Johanna, to whom he left his property in Selborne. This lady married Richard Achard ; and that estate bears still the name of Gordon Manor, and the armorial ensigns of Sir Adam Gurdon are those still borne by the family of which we are now treating. — JOHN GURDON, of Assing- [103] BUCKS OF WETHERS FIELD, CONN ton Hall, Sir Adam's second son (by his second wife, Almeria) . Of the elder son there is no further account. Robert Gordon (son of John) took up his abode in London. He died in 1343, and was succeeded by his son — John Gordon, a merchant in London, who died in 1385, leaving a son — Thomas Gordon, of Clyne, in Kent, who died in 1436, and was father of — John Gordon, of Clyne, who was succeeded, in 1465, by his son — John Gordon, of Dedham, in Essex, who died in 1489, leaving a son — John Gordon, of Dedham, who married, first, Marv, daughter of John Butler, Esq., of Dedham, but had no issue. He married, secondly, ANNE, daughter of John Coleman, Esq., of Lynes Hall, in Suffolk, and left a son — Robert Gordon, Esq., who married Rose, daugh- ter and heiress of Robert Sexton, Esq., of Lavenham, in Suffolk. This gentleman purchased Assington Hall from Sir Miles Corbet. ( It belonged, in the fourteenth century, to John Gurdon, second son of Sir Adam Gur- don.) He served the office of sheriff, and, dying in 1577, was succeeded by his son — John Gordon, Esq., who married AMY, daughter and heiress of William Brampton, Esq., of Letton, in Norfolk. The family of Brampton is very ancient in [104] BUCKS OF WETHERSFIELD, CONN. Norfolk, and this branch had long been settled at Letton, in Norfolk. (Vide "Visitations" of Norfolk, 1563 and 1613.) Brampton Gordon, Esq., of Assington Hall and of Letton, High Sheriff for Suffolk in 1625, and sev- eral times representative for the borough of Sudbury in Parliament. He married ELIZABETH, daughter of Edward Barrett, Esq., of Bellhouse, in Essex, and had issue — John Gurdon, his heir. Robert, who married Joyce, daughter of James Harvey, Esq., of Essex. Amy, who married Sir Henry Mildmay. Mr. Brampton Gurdon married, secondly, MURIEL, daughter of Sir Martyn Sedley, of Morley, in Norfolk, and had another son and two daughters— Brampton Gurdon, ancestor of the Gurdons of Letton, in Norfolk. Muriel, who married Richard Saltonstall, Esq., of Yorkshire (son of Sir Richard Saltonstall, who came to America in 1630.) [105] BUCKS OF WETHERSFIELD, CONN WINTHROP GENEALOGY. John Winthr op I Born 1577. Died 1649. I [Governor of Massachusetts Bay Colony, 1630.] Joh n W inthrop 'Born 1605. Died 1676. [Elected Governor of New Haven Colony, 1657; first Governor under the charter after the union of Con- necticut and New Haven Colonies.] Wait-Still Winthro p Mary Brown Died 1690 [Second son of John Winthrop, 1605-1676. ] Born 1641. Died 1717. John Winthrop Ann Dudley Born 1681. Born 1684. Died 1747. Died 1776. [Daughter of Gov. Joseph Dudley. Rebecca Winthrop Born 17127" Died 1776. [Married to General Gurdon Saltonstall] [106] BUCKS OF WETHERSFIELD, CONN. DUDLEY GENEALOGY. [From Cotton Mather's account. For the earlier genealogy, see "The Sutton-Dudleys of England," by George Adlard.] Thomas Dudley (born in Northampton, England, in 1576; died in 1653) was the only surviving son of Captain Roger Dudley who was "killed in the wars." He was brought up in the family of the Earl of North- ampton, and afterward became a clerk to his maternal kinsman, Judge Nichols, and thus obtained some knowl- edge of the law, which proved of great service to him in his subsequent life. At the age of twenty, he received a captain's commission from Queen Elizabeth, and com- manded a company of volunteers under Henry IV of France, at the siege of Amiens in 1597. On the con- clusion of peace (1598), he returned to England and settled near Northampton, where he was in the neigh- borhood of Dod, Hildersham, and other eminent Puri- tan divines, and became himself a non-conformist. He enjoyed also the ministry of the Rev. John Cotton, at Boston, in Lincolnshire. After this, he was prevailed upon by the Earl of Lincoln to resume in his family the place he had already filled for several years with such eminent success, as the steward of their whole estate. And there he continued until the storm of persecution [107] BUCKS OF WETHERS FIELD, CONN. led him to join the company that were meditating a removal to New England. He did also another great and good service to the family of the Earl, by procuring a match between the young Earl of Lincoln, Theo- philus, and the daughter of the Lord Say, who was so wise, virtuous, and every way so well an accomplished lady that she proved a great blessing to the whole family. Mr. Thomas Dudley was one of the signers of the agreement at Cambridge, August 29, 1629, and we find him present for the first time at the Company's courts, on the 1 6th of October. He was not among the first of those that embarked, in the design for New England, which is the reason why he was not numbered among the Patentees, but, as soon as he came, they soon dis- covered his great wisdom and other abilities, which made them pitch upon him in the second place, after Mr. Winthrop in the Governor's place, for which he was elected in 1634. He was a man of great spirit, honor, and dignity, as well as of great understanding; suitable to the family he was descended from; and envy itself can not deny him a place amongst the first three that ever were called to intermeddle in the affairs of Massachusetts. He was endowed with many excellent abilities that qualified him thereunto. He was well skilled in the law; he was likewise a great historian. He had an excellent pen, nor was he a mean poet. But, in his latter times, he conversed more with God and [108] BUCKS OF W E T H E R S F I E L D, CONN. his own heart, foreseeing his own change fast approach- ing upon him. He died (1653) at Roxbury, Massa- chusetts, where he was honorably interred. Thomas Dudley was also the first major-general of Massachusetts. By his first wife, Dorothy , he had six children, the oldest of whom, Samuel, married, in 1633, Mary, the daughter of Gov. John Winthrop. By his second wife, Catherine Hackburne (widow of Samuel Hackburne), he had three children, of whom the second one was Joseph Dudley — Governor of Massachusetts, Lieutenant Governor of the Isle of Wight, and first Chief Justice of New York. He was born September 23, 1647, and died April 2, 1720. He married Rebekah, daughter of Edward Tyng, and they had thirteen chil- dren. The ninth child, Ann Dudley (born August 27, 1684; died May 29, 1776), married John Winthrop, only son of Wait- Still Winthrop. Of their nine children, the fourth, Rebeckah Winthrop (baptized January 11, 1712; died October 30, 1776), married GURDON SaltoN- STALL, son of Governor Gurdon Saltonstall. [109] BUCKS OF WETHERSFIELD, CONN DEMING GENEALOGY. John Deming '""i. i637) Honor Treat Born 1615. Born 1616. Died 1705. Jonathan Deming (^d. i673) Elizabeth Gilbert Born 1639. Born 1654. Died 1700. Died 1714. Charles Deming (^d. i706) Anna Wickham " Born 1681. Burn 1684. Died 1740. Died 1711. Ann D eming <■"'' i^oe) josiah Buck. Born 1711. Died 1772. WICKHAM GENEALOGY. Thomas W ickham Sarah ? ' Died in Wethersfield in 1689. Thomas Wickham <"id. i673) Mary Hurlburt Born 1651. Died 1716, in Wethersfield. Anna Wickham *mJ i673)Charles Deming Born 1684. Died 1711. *Sarah Churchill was the slaughter of Josiah Churchill and Eliza Foote, who were mar- ried in 1638, and was perhaps the second wife of Thomas Wickham, 1st. [110] BUCKS OF W E T H E R S F I E L D, CONN HUBBERT GENEALOGY. [More recently spelled Hubbard] George Hubbard Mary ? Died 1683. Died 1676. Daniel Hubbard (^d. Nov. i6, i664) Elizabeth Jordan I Died 1720. Daughter of John Jordan, of Guilford. Elizabeth Hubbard (^d. june 14, i690) David Buck Born Jan. 3, 1669. Died March 25, 1735. KIRBY GENEALOGY. John Kirby Elizabeth (?) Hinds Died 1677. Mary Kirby married Emanuel Buck I Born 1645. Of Wethersfield. I Mary Kirby, eldest child of John Kirby, of Mid- dletown, and Elizabeth, his wife, married — at fourteen years of age, as second wife — Emanuel Buck, of Weth- ersfield. Date of marriage, April 17, 1658. At the time of her father's death, in April, 1677, Mary Kirby was thirty-two years old. She, herself, died, a widow, on January 12, 1712. [Ill] BUCKS OF W E T H E R S F I E L D, CONN. John Kirby had been at Plymouth, in 1643, and at Hartford and Wethersfield ; he owned a copyhold estate at Rowington, near Kenilworth, in Warwick- shire. His will was dated April 6, and was proved April 27, 1677. His only surviving son, Joseph, had a lawsuit about his father's estate. THE MANWARING FAMILY IN THE OLD WORLD. I Extracts from a communication made to me by Dr. Howard M. Buck, Boston. Massachusetts] "The name, as originally spelled — Mesnil-Guerin, comes from a little village (now Mesnil-Garnier), about twenty-seven kilometers from Coutances, in Nor- mandy. The land seems to have remained in the hands of the family until about 1590, when it passed into the possession of the Morants. In England, the primitive arms of the family are 'argent two bars gules,' and we find to-day, scattered over France, gentle families of the names of Mesnil and Maisniel, who bear modifica- tions of these arms. * * * The original invad- ing Mesnil-Guerin was a follower of William the Con- queror's nephew. He received fiefs in Norfolk and Cheshire. * * * fhe earlier Mainwarings [112] BUCKS OF W E T H E R S F I E L D, CONN. were a fighting race. At Nantwich the local Main- warings, cadets of cadets, were largely interested in the salt wells, and it was from that town that some of the family migrated to Exeter, or Devon. There had been other earlier bearers of the name in Devon, but they had been chiefly among the ranks of the clergy and seem to have left no descendants. The Exeter line were civilians, of the middle class of gentry, royal bailiflfs and custom house officials, speculators in tithes and church glebe rents. One of them seems to have been a confidential clerk to Sir George Peckham in his asso- ciation with Sir Humphrey Gilbert for the coloniza- tion of America, and it was from him that the Dawlish or Devon branch sprung. Their settlement there in that healthful fishing village seems to have been deter- mined by the fact that the family farmed the great tithes of the parish from the Dean and Chapter of Ex- eter Cathedral. There is no evidence as to what house they occupied. * * * "Yhe most interesting memorials of the family are : ( i ) The St. Anne's Hos- pital for eight old women, just outside the east gate of Exeter. It was founded by them in 1558, on the site of a dilapidated chapel (built in 1418), and is in opera- tion to-day. (2) The coat of arms of Oliver Manwar- ing, Benefactor, in the Guild Hall, Exeter. * * * "The male line in direct descent died out in Devon, but the connection is represented, to-day, in the Clapp family in Exeter." [113] BUCKS OF WETHERSFIELD CONN. LATER MANWARING GENEALOGY. [Mainwaring.] Randle Mainwaring' Margery Venables Of Over Peover, near Knutsford, England. [ISth century] Died 1456. Randle Mainwaring Of^Tarincham. Died circa 1474. William Mainwaring Of Nantwi^TT George Mainwaring Margaret Savage * * * Titley Juliana Spurway Of Exeter. Died 1570-1575, Oliver Mainwaring Of (?) London. Oliver Mainwaring (""d. 16I8) Prudence Esse Of Exeter and Dawlish. Of Sowton. Died 1672. P.nrn 1599. Oliver Mainwaring Of Dawlish. Born 1633. The records in England furnish no positive evidence beyond this point. Three circumstances, however, furnish strong presumptive evidence that the Oliver of Dawlish and the Oliver of Salem and New Lon- don are one and the same person: — (1) the date of the latter's death in 1723, "at the age of 90," and (2) the occupation which he followed (that of mar- iner). If the Dawlish Oliver had come to America [114] BUCKS OF W E T H E R S F I E L D, CONN and had died in 1723, he would have been 90 years old. A person coming to this country in early man- hood from a fishing village like Dawlish would be likely to adopt the very occupation which the Salem Oliver followed during the earlier years of his life. (3) The appearance of the consecutive names "Pru- dence" and "Love" among the daughters of Oliver Manwaring, of New London, — names which corre- spond to those of Prudence Esse and Lovedy Moyle, mother and maternal grandmother of Oliver Main- waring, of Dawlish. Various circumstances which it is not necessary to mention here, explain easily Dr. Howard M. Buck's inability to find in the records any further evidence of the fate of Oliver Main- waring, of Dawlish. This very silence of the records is in harmony with the assumption that the latter emigrated to America. Oliver Manwaring Hannah Raymond Of Salem and New London. Of Salem. Died 1723 in New London, "act. 90." Born 1643. Died 1717. Oliver Manwaring (^d- i^os) Hanna Hough Born 1688. Died 1754. Of New London. Born 1679. Died 1754. William Manwaring {"'<^- i^as) Rebecca Gager Of New London. Born 1708. Died 1779. Born 1709. Died 1779. David Manwaring (md. i767) Martha Saltonstall Of New London and New York. Born 1741. Died 1804. Born 1748. Died 1823. [115] BUCKS OF WETHERS FIELD, CONN Susannah Man waring, (md. isos) Gurdon Buck. Born 1783. Of New York. Died 1839. FURTHER DETAILS OF THE MANWARING GENEALOGY. David Manwaring (born February 3, 1741 ; died May 8, 1804), married MARTHA Saltonstall, daugh- ter of Gurdon and Rebecca Winthrop Saltonstall, Jan- uary 15, 1767. Their children : — William, born November 12, 1767; died May, 1768. Rebecca, born December 27, 1768; married Elisha Coit, January 20, 1793. Hannah, born November 29, 1770; died July 19, 1771. David, born May 13, 1772; died July, 1811. He married Lucy Colfax. Martha, born May 15, 1774; died November 24, 1788. Gurdon, born November 10, 1776; died January 7, 1838. He married Ann Adams. Lucy, born December 19, 1778; date of death un- known. She married David Greene Hubbard, Octo- ber 26, 1799; and he died December 29, 1825. Susannah, born September 23, 1783; died April 13, 1839. She married Gordon Buck. rii6] BUCKS OF WETHERSFIELD, CONN WOLFF GENEALOGY. Bernhardt Wolff (^d. isss ?) Marie ? Born circa 1550. Born circa 1556. Died 1610. Died 1629. Michel Wolf ("^d. 1615 ?> Margarete Munsch Keeper of one of the gates of the town of Kiinzelsau. Born circa 1586. Born ? Died 1637. Died 1634. Georg Wolf (n^d. 1658 ?) Margarete Seyter Born 1622. Born 1626. Died 1667. Died 1667. Hans Georg Wolf (">d i689?) Marie Magdalene B^rn 1662." Schmetzer Died 1730. Born 1661. Died 1719. JOHANN Georg Wolf (m^. 1717 ?) Marie Kneller Born 1693. Born 1695. Died 1748. Died 1731. Engelbert Heinrich Wolf (™d. 1739) Susanne Marie Born 1719. Schaner Died 1791. Born 1723. Died ? Philippe Heinrich Wolff ^"'<^- i77o?) Catherine Elis- Born 1743. abeth Keller Died ? Dates of birth and death unknown. Albert Henri Wolff (^d- ^^^y Amelie Antoinette BOTni778. Hauloch Died 1848. Born 1790. Died about 1878. Henriette Elisabeth Wolff (married) Gurdon Buck B^n 1810: Died 1899. [117] /^ BUCKS OF WETHERSFIELD, CONN HAULOCH GENEALOGY. Christian Haljloch (Name of wife unknown) I Of Strasbourg. Christian Hauloch (md. 1756) Esther Libride' Came to Geneva in 1753. Of Etivaz, near Chateau d'Oex. i\ 'The pastor of the church at Etivaz writes to me that he can find no evidence, in the church or town records, of there having been a family by the name of Libride In that village at any time previous to 1760. Antoine Hauloch ^^d. i784) Frangoise Elisabeth Born 1757. Born 1757. Barral Died 1831. Died 1846 or 1847. Amelie Antoinette Hauloch (married) Albert Henri BUrtri790. Wolff Died about 1878. [See Scheme on page 117.] [118] BUCKS OF WETHERSFIELD, CONN BARRAL GENEALOGY. Henri Barral (Nameof wife unknown) I Died circa 1586. I Maurice Barral (md. issi) Marie Perrot Died 1615. Died 1615. I Both of Geneva.] Jean Pierre Barral (™d- 1636) Helene Petit- Maistre Died circa 1647. Pierre Barral ("i^. i663) Jeanne St. Pierre Born circa 1638. Died 1705. Jean Louis Barral (^^- '^ne) Jeanne Rambour Born 1677. Died 1723. Jean Baptiste Barral (md. 1755) Rose Charpillier Born 1713. (Cherbuliez.] Died 1761. Fran^oise Elisabeth Barral (md.) Antoine Hauloch Born 1757. Of Geneva. [See Schemes on pages 117 and 118.) [119] BUCKS OF WETHERSFIELD, CONN. PART V. MORE RECENT GENEALOGY OF THE DE- SCENDANTS OF JOHN AUCHINCLOSS AND ELIZABETH BUCK. (See also page 92.) (i) Children of Henry B. Aiichincloss and Mary Cabell, of Charlottesville. Virginia. Margaret Cabell, born October i, 1861; married Richard M. Colgate, April 7, 1885. Henry A. Colgate, born September 29, 1891. Muriel Colgate, born November 9, 1897. Henry Stuart, born March i, 1863; died an infant. Arthur Stirling, born October 9, 1867; married, June II, 1896, Margaret Gresham Barry. Elizabeth BELDEN,born June 17, 1869; died Novem- ber 25, 1876. John, Jr., born December 8, 1872. James Cabell, born May 26, 1876; died September 7, 1882. Mary Dudley, born April 12, 1877. (2) Children of Sarah Ann Auchincloss and Sir James Coats. Elizabeth Winthrop, born August 27, 1858; married Thomas Glen Arthur, of Paisley, Scotland. James Coats Arthur, born Alice Dudley Arthur, born January 31, 1891. [120] BUCKS OF W E T H E R S F I E L D, CONN. Annie McKenzie, born May 27, i860; married George Gordon King, June 16, 1891. Mary LeRoy, died an infant. Dorothy Gordon, born April 16, 1895. Violet Gordon, born January 18, 1897. Edward, born March 2, 1901. Alice Dudley, born November 29, 1862; died March 2, 1889; married Theodore Frelinghuysen in Au- gust, 1886. T. Frederick Frelinghuysen, born September 5, 1886. James Coats, died an infant. Stuart Auchincloss, born March 20, 1868; married Jane Muir Greenless, September 8, 1891. James Stuart, born 1894. Muir Dudley. Margaret, born March 18, 1901. Alfred Manwaring, born April 12, 1869; married Elizabeth Barnevvell, September 4, 1895. Archibald, born Mabel Van R.. born June 2, 1899. Elizabeth, born December, 1902. James Munroe, born January 6, 1875 ; married Annie Caswell, of Providence, R. I. (3) Children of William S. .Auchincloss and Martha T. Kent. James Stuart, born April 12, 1872; married April 3, 1899, to Hazel Hulbert. William Stuart, born January 21, 1900. [121] .y BUCKS OF W E T H E R S F I E L D, CONN. Jane Kent, bom September 21, 1874; married Henry Allen Truslow, on April 18, 1900. James Laidlaw, born February 21, 1901. Frederick Kent, born November 9, 1902. William, born, August 20, 1904. Francis Allen, born May 4th, 1906. Elizabeth, born May 18, 1908. William Kent, born October 7, 1877. (4) Children of Edgar Stirling Auchincloss and Ma- ria LeGrange Sloan. Samuel Sloan, born March 2, 1872; married October 189 — , to Annie Agnew. Samuel Sloan, Jr., born October 12, 1903. Edgar Stirling, born December 13, 1875; married February 14, 1899, to Marie Mott, who died Sep- tember 3, 1899; married April 14, 1903, Catherine S. Agnew. Mary Bliss, born April 6, 1904. Elizabeth Ellen 3d, born June 27. 1905. Katrina, born October 7, 1907. Elizabeth Ellen, Jr., born April 24, 1877; died De- cember 29, 1904. Hugh, born December 28, 1878; married September 29, 1908, Frances C. Newlands. Charles Crooke, born September 24, 1881; married June 19, 1906, Rosamond Saltonstall, of Boston. Rosamond Saltonstall 2d, born April 2. 1907. [122] BUCKS OF VVETHERSFIELD, CONN. James Coats, born January 19, 1885 ; engaged to Fran- ces Lee Alexander. Gordon, born June 15, 1886. Reginald LeGrange, born January 20, 1891. (5) Children of John Winthrop Auchincloss and Jo- anna Hone Russell. Charles Russell, born November 24, 1881 ; married May 25, 1905, to Helen P. Russell, of Middletown, Connecticut. Helen Russell, born January 22, 1907. Elizabeth, born May ii, 1884; married January 12, 1907, to Percy Hall Jennings. Percy Hall, born October 7, 1907. Joanna Russell, born December 15. 1908. John Winthrop, born May 22, 1886; died March — 1888. Joseph Howland, bom May 22, 1886. Joanna Russell, born May 25, 1889. Caroline, born January 7, 1891. (6) Children of Hugh Dudley Auchincloss and Emma Brewster Jennings. Esther Judson, born November 9, 1895. Hugh Dudley, born August 28, 1897. Annie Burr, born July 22, 1902. [123] BUCKS OF WETHERSFIELD, CONN PART VI. BIOGRAPHICAL AND GENEALOGICAL DATA RELATING TO THE ABBOTTS. Obituary Notice of the Rev. John S. C. Abbott, D. D. [From Harper's Weekly of July 7, 1877.] The Rev. John S. C. Abbott died at his residence in Fair Haven, Connecticut, June 17, after a lingering ill- ness. As a popular historian he probably ranked sec- ond to no one in the United States. Mr. Abbott was one of five sons, three of whom have left a remarkable impress on the age and nation. The oldest, Mr. Jacob Abbott, may be regarded almost as the creator of juvenile literature in this country. His "Rollo" books are still without a peer in their peculiar department; his "Harper Story Books" and his "Red Histories" (to which latter series Mr. John S. C. Abbott also contributed) are a permanent classic; and his "Young Christian" has been published in almost every European language and in some heathen dialects, we believe. Mr. Gorham Abbott was a pioneer in the work of female education, and the now defunct "Sping- ler Institute" became the model of other more ade- [124] BUCKS OF W E T H E R S F I E L D, CONN. quately endowed, and therefore, longer-lived institu- tions. Mr. Charles and Mr. Samuel Abbott are less widely known, but each of them rendered good service to the work of education by his remarkably successful school for boys. Two only of the five brothers are still living — Charles and Jacob; Samuel died some thirty years ago, Gorham about two years since. The father, Jacob Abbott, a citizen of Maine, where the boys spent their boyhood, was a Puritan of the very noblest type — a man of the most unbending conscience, tempered with the most genial sympathy and the largest love. "He had," said one of his old friends, "a remark- able talent for being happy"; and this talent descended to his children. He was an agent for large land-owners in the forests of Maine, and became in time a large owner himself, and to the present day the name of "old Squire Abbott" is held in affectionate reverence by the children of the men with whom he had to deal. The mother had a rich and strong and happy religious faith. To her, death had never any terrors; she looked to it through years of feeble health as a summons to her Father's home; and to the influence of her example Mr. Abbott attributed his own happy thoughts of death and the life beyond. In Hallowell, where the earlier years of the boy were spent, was an English family by the name of Vaughan, into which his brother, Mr. Jacob Abbott, afterward married. In the Vaughan mansion was [125] BUCKS OF WETHERSFIELD, CONN. what was in those days a magnificent library of ten or twelve thousand volumes, which was placed at the ser- vice of the Abbott boys. The opportunity was appre- ciated and used, and to this circumstance may be, per- haps, attributed the literary tastes and capabilities of later years. John was, however, no bookworm. He thoroughly enjoyed the sports of his time, and was a favorite leader among his associates. In his reminis- cences, penned — or rather penciled — on his sick-bed, he gives a graphic account of his exploits in building snow forts and excavating snow caves in the mammoth drifts of the Maine winters. The father had the Puritan ambition to give his boys a complete education; and this included, accord- ing to the ideas of those times, a course in theology as well as in secular learning. So he sent them all through college and the theological seminary, leaving them to take what profession in after-life they might choose or Providence might open to them. Mr. John Abbott was fitted by his native constitu- tion for the ofiice of a minister, and was, perhaps, the only one of the brothers who was so specially fitted. He had by nature a rare command of language; he was a natural rhetorician; he was a remarkable word- painter; he was a born advocate; he was an enthusiast in whatever he believed or whatever he undertook. He was, therefore, from the first a remarkably popular preacher, at a time when the power of the painter and [126] BUCKS OF W E T H E R S F I E L D, CONN. the language of feeling were not so common in the pulpit as they are in our day. His first parish was one of the largest and most important in New England, outside of Boston — that of Worcester, Massachusetts; and he left it to occupy successively that of Roxbury, a growing suburb of Boston, and that of Nantucket, at that time one of the largest and most flourishing com- munities in the State. Meanwhile he had drifted into literature in a singu- lar way. He had organized a Maternal Association in his first parish, and to it he delivered a course of famil- iar lectures on the duties of mothers. These, after their delivery, he put into a little book, which a Boston pub- lisher accepted from the unknown author with some hesitation. But the book was small, the season was dull, the risk was light, and the volume was printed. This was the now famous "Mother at Home." It had just those qualities of simplicity of expression, intense prac- ticality of suggestion, and warmth of feeling which conspire to make both useful and successful literature. The unpretending little treatise was straightway re- published in England, and thereafter successively in most of the European languages. In Calcutta, in Athens, in Constantinople, even in Africa, the number of copies printed is unknown, but it is simply pro- digious. While Mr. John Abbott was thus successfully pur- suing the double work of pastor and author, his elder [127] BUCKS OF WETHERSFIELD, CONN. brother (Jacob), also a successful author, had estab- lished the famous Mount Vernon School in Boston. The underlying principle of this school was that pupils could be better governed by the moral force of reason than by fear and coercion. So fully was this principle carried out that there were absolutely no rules in the school except those which the pupils made for them- selves, and no other restraint than such as the school, as a well-regulated community, exercised over itself. The success was so great that the four brothers, Jacob, John, Gorham and Charles, resolved to unite in estab- lishing a similar school on a larger scale, and selected for the field of their operations the City of New York. This was over forty years ago, and at that time the Turkish idea of female education was not eliminated from American society. Is it even yet? The brothers entered upon what seemed to others a hazardous ex- periment. Their earnestness and the fundamentally correct principles which underlay their plan made the school from the first a success. There is probably to-day in that city no school for young ladies where such large liberty is enjoyed as was possessed by the pupils in the Abbott School; and we believe that we are perfectly safe in saying that it was never in a single instance abused. The scholars had the confidence of their teachers, and, partly as a consequence, the teachers had the affection of their scholars. But Jacob and John could not escape the fascina- [128] BUCKS OF WETHERSFIELD, CONN. tions of literature; Gorham withdrew to establish a separate school; John began his famous history of Na- poleon, in Harper's Magazine, and, becoming more and more interested in it, left the school to devote himself to its completion, and the school was discontinued in the midst of its prosperity. From that time the life of Mr. John S. C. Abbott has been not, indeed, a quiet one, but an uneventful one. He has always been fond of change, and it is only in the latter years of his life that he has had a permanent home. While chiefly known to the public as a writer of popular history, he has been, during most of the time, a successful preacher and pastor. He has spent the week in his historical studies and writing, and has gone into the pulpit on the Sabbath and preached, always to full churches, but always extemporaneously, from his abundant treasures. His career in this respect has illustrated the truth that the true pulpit prepara- tion is not that of the week, but that of the whole life. He has found an especial delight in taking parishes which were, from one reason or another, in a somewhat typhoidal condition, and building them up again, to leave them, as soon as they were really able to support a competent pastor, to the care of successors. He has thus served successively five different parishes, which owe their present prosperity largely to his labors. As an author, Mr. Abbott's most important works have been "The Mother at Home," "The Child at [129] BUCKS OF WETHERS FIELD, CONN. Home"; the histories of "Napoleon Bonaparte," the "French Revolution," the "Civil War," and "Frederic the Great"; his contributions to the "Red Histories," the "American Pioneers and Patriots," and a series of State histories. But these are only a small proportion of his actual contributions to the literature of the age. Other histories hold a higher place in the great libra- ries, but the works of no other historian have been more widely read or more truly useful. This is not the place for a literary critique on his works. But this may be said, that while no other historian has been more se- verely and even savegely criticised, few errors have ever been detected in his narratives. No work was ever subjected to a severer scrutiny than his "Napoleon Bonaparte"; but while his arguments were assailed, and even his motives were called in question at the time, only one considerable error was detected in any state- ment of fact, and that in a matter of unimportant detail. While, too, he is not a preacher in his books, he never ceases to be a Christian, and the religious spirit, though never offensively prominent, is never absent. Mr. Abbott had a large family — two boys and five girls — who lived to maturity. The oldest son, ap- pointed United States District Attorney in Florida during the war, under President Lincoln, died soon after going South. One of the daughters also died some years since. Another daughter is at the head of a very successful school in New Haven, of which she [130] BUCKS OF W E T H E R S F I E L D, CONN. was the founder. The other daughters are married, and are living, one near Boston, the others in New York or vicinity. Mr. Abbott's personal appearance was fine, and the expression of his face was peculiarly winning. He inherited from his father the "remarkable talent for being happy," and imparted it to every one with whom he came in contact. The last year of his life, though at times he suffered greatly, was one of great peace and joy, and his dying was a simple going home to be at rest in his Heavenly Father's presence, and with the friends who had gone before." (End of obituary notice.) 'Heredity goes for little, as a rule, in transmitting literary taste and ability, as we often observe. Three-quarters of a century ago, five Abbott boys graduated at Bowdoin College — one of them, John .S. C. Abbott, the uncle, and another, Jacob Abbott, the father of the four Abbott boys, Henjamin Vaughan Abbott, Austin Ab- bott, Lyman Abbott and lidward .\bbott, who, about forty years ago all graduated from the University of the City of New York. John S. C. Abbott and Jacob Abbott were both Congregational ministers, and did much in that profession. Besides, they made their names known wherever the English language is spoken, by their writings, including a series of biographies and histories, so comprehensive, instructive and methodical that the press of the whole country commend them: and President Lin- coln said to Mr. John S. C. Abbott shortly before his death: "I want to thank you and your brother for Abbott's Series of Histories. They give me, in brief compass, just that knowledge of past men and events which I need. I have read them with the greatest interest." Now. this, the second generation, Benjamin Vaughan, Austin and Lyman, are the authors of Abbotts' Digests and other law books, a hundred volumes or more in all. .\bbotts' Digests are known to every English-speaking lawyer and are on the shelves of every considerable law library in the United States. Benjamin Vaughan Abbott, the pioneer, is dead; but his books are a living and lasting monument to his memory. Austin Abbott, the second brother, an equal sharer in the merit of these books, is now at the head of the faculty of the University Law School where Benja- min Vaughan was, at one time, a professor. Dr. Lyman Abbott, formerly of Abbott Brothers, counsellors at law, has to-day one of the most enviable pulpits in Christendom, and is also a distinguished journalist. Herbert Spencer ought to have the case of these two generations of Abbotts, as evidence, in support of his theory of the Law of Heredity. [131] BUCKS OF WETHERSFIELD, CONN. John S. C. Abbott was one of that distinguished class of 1825 at Bowdoin College which counted among its members Henry W. Longfellow, Nathaniel Haw- thorne, George Cheever, and Jonathan Cilley. Frank- lin Pierce and William Pitt Fessenden were in college at the same time. In the Evening Standard, of Boston, (December, 1898) there was published an account of a severe storm which occurred at Nantucket on November 27, 1898. In the course of his narrative, the writer of this account says: *'Some of the older residents think the storm has not been surpassed in severity since the remarkable gale of 1842, when the ship Joseph Starbuck, of Nan- tucket, was lost while on her way to Edgartown in tow [The foot-note (p. 131) which ends at this point forms an integral part of the pre- ceding obituary notice. Twenty-nine years have elapsed since it was written, and fur- ther evidence has accumulated in favor of the belief that a gift for successful literary vi'ork is hereditary in the Abbott family. Among the descendants of Jacob Abbott I may mention two of the sons of Lyman Abbott as having inherited this gift — ^Lavirence F. and Ernest Abbott, both of whom are on the editorial staff of Tlu: Outlook. A third son, Herbert Abbott, now connected with Smith College, Massachusetts, was for a tiniL- Professor of KngHsli Literature in Columbia ITniversity, New York. One of liie daughters of John S. C Abbott— Laui a S. AM.olt, now "Mrs. Albert H. Buck — published (in 1873 or 1874) two books for children: "Tiptoe," and "How Tiptoe Grew." A notice published in a Boston newspaper said of the first of these books: "'Tiptoe' is the title of a charming book by Katherinc Williams [the noni de plume adopted by the authoress]. The story is capitally told and will not fail to engross the interest of young readers." A notice in the New York Tribune says of it: "One of the best and sweetest children's books on which we have lately fallen is 'Tiptoe,' by Katharine Williams (American Tract Society, Publishers)." Willis J. Abbott, the son of the late Waldo Abbott — the oldest child of John S. C. Abbott — is a well-known journalist and writer of fiction. His "The Boys in Blue" which gained a great popularity, shows clearly that he also has inherited from his grand- father the gift of telling a story in a simple and fascinating manner. It would be very difficult to find another instance of a family in which so many of its members, belonging to three successive generations, give evidence of possessing well-marked literary gifts.— A. H. B.] [132] BUCKS OF WETHERSFIELD, CONN. of Steamer Telegraph, to fit for a whaling voyage — and it happened exactly fifty-six years ago, on a Sun- day, the 27th of November, 1842. Five ladies, wives and relatives of the officers, were on board. The ship, in tow of steamer Telegraph, left Nantucket on Satur- day and the wind increased to a gale, blowing so strong that the steamer could make no headway. The ship anchored in Vineyard Sound and the steamer went into Edgartown. The ship dragged her anchors all night, and on Sunday morning was in Nantucket Sound, drifting to the eastward. "All three masts were cut away, but she still dragged until she struck bottom in the vicinity of Great Point. It was a day of intense anxiety for all interested. The steamboat company ofifered to send the steamer Massa- chusetts to rescue the people on board if a volunteer crew could be found. The Rev. John S. C. Abbott, who was then pastor of the First Congregational Church in Nantucket, immediately volunteered to be one of the rescue party. This ofYer inspired confidence in the officers and crew of the steamer, and she went to the rescue with Mr. Abbott on board, and succeeded in saving the whole party. The officers and crew and lady passengers were taken from the ship to the steamer in a whaleboat, and the ship eventually went to pieces." [133] BUCKS OF WETHERSFIELD, CONN. OBITUARY NOTICE OF MRS. JOHN S. C. ABBOTT. From the New York Times, of May 21, 1896, I have copied the following obituary notice: "Mrs. John S. C. Abbott, widow of the historian, died on Monday at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Oliver Johnson, in Fishkill Village, New York. She was eighty-six years of age. Mrs. Abbott was of New England birth and family, and a native of Boston. Her father, Abner Bourne, was one of the public-spirited merchant citizens of Boston at the beginning of this century.' "She was married at an early age to the Rev. John S. C. Abbott, during his first pastorate of the Congre- gational Church in Roxbury, Massachusetts, and in- spired him at that time to write the "Mother at Home," in 1834, which is said to have probably entered more homes than any other English book, except the Bible. It has been published in many languages. "Mrs. Abbott was a constant and valuable aid to her husband in his literary labors, although she had the care of a large family. Many of the fifty-four volumes Dr. Abbott wrote were transcribed and in- dexed by her pen. "Mrs. Abbott was a hospitable and social woman, who attracted young and old. She was a tireless worker 'For tliL- Itourne and Williams genealogies, see t'artlier on, page 138- [134] BUCKS OF WETHERSFIELD, CONN, in the New England parishes of which Dr. Abbott was pastor, and in the Abbott Institution for Young Ladies in New York City, in which he was the pioneer in the higher education of young women in this country. Many college students of Bowdoin and Yale will re- member with much pleasure her receptions and home life." ABBOTT GENEALOGY.' [From "A Genealogical Register of the Descendants of George Abbot, of Andover," published in Boston in 1847.] "Nothing is certainly known of George Abbot pre- viously to his emigrating from England to this country. He and the first settlers in Andover were Puritans. George Abbot emigrated, as tradition reports, from Yorkshire, England, about 1640, and came over in the same vessel with Hannah Chandler, who, several years after, became his wife. It might, under other circum- stances, seem unbecoming in us to speak of the virtues of the descendants of our ancestor, but, in a Genea- logical Register prepared for the family, it will not be thought to involve any impropriety if we commend to the living those, as we think, characteristic good qual- ities for which we honor the dead. Any one, familiar 'For an explanation of the reasons which led to the change in the spelling of the name Abbot, !-ee page 141. [135J BUCKS OF WETHERSFIELD, CONN. with those descended from George Abbot, can not but be struck with the fact that, from his time to the pres- ent (1847), they have, as a family or tribe, possessed a marked character of their own. The number of his grandchildren was at least seventy-three; of these, as many as forty-four had families; thirty of these settled in Andover. A large number of his posterity remains there. As members of the community, they have been industrious, temperate, fond of home, minding their own business, honest in their dealings, punctual in pay- ing their debts, and good citizens. "In 1647, George Abbot married Hannah Chand- ler, daughter of William and Annis Chandler. Her brother, Thomas Chandler, was among the first settlers of Andover, and progenitor of a numerous race. George Abbot died December 24, 1681, aged 66." DIRECT LINE OF ABBOTT ANCESTRY. The genealogical record of the descendants of George Abbot, so far as it relates to the branch of the family to which Jacob and John S. C. Abbott belong, is as follows: — George Abbot '"^i 1647) Hannah Chandler Andover, Mass Born 1629. Born 1615 Died June 11, 1711. Died Dec. 24, 1681. [136] BUCKS OF WETHERSFIELD, CONN Nathaniel Abbot (■"d.) Mary Torry And CaptaiHl (Second son.) Daughter of Haviland Born Oct. 23, 1747. Torry, of Plymouth. Died March 25, 1806. Abner Bourne <'" Abigail Williams Born 1781, in Middlcboro, Mass. Died 1840, in Boston. Williams Genealogy." Samuel Williams ("^d.) Bathsheba Godfrey Of Taunton. Col. Gideon Williams (""d.) Annah Burt Born 1745, in Taunton. Born 1755, in Berkeley, Died 1830, in Roxbury. Bristol Co., Mass. Died 1838, in Boston. Abigail Williams («" ■ ^-'^ ■ ^i-A-if /■.•*v ■'■■'■ c.* ■o^*".#fe-.\./°'- , "l' =t;'- .^ ,V' ..S V V V^^' r'^iM''^ O ■^0' ^^ ■;■■ - '^ <-* V • , •■•' '' - ■<■ -b — ,1 V- ,v >v.>- ' ,^ i-, . ■, |V..l .- „ .,V^^ ■ T-5 / » ,^vr. •x^ -^ ,v- ■%_ ■,>;:.:;?/ , '^^^ -O' ,0' o ~ ;, , , ■ ' .0- . t- ' / x> V v- / /fvUji^', , \^~ ■ (■ - -b •J' ■ V- '■^. •'^^u^Sv \ . wv •' '" -O" .0- .-N .0' ,x^^ 'o ■■,..--\

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