1- 67 .K4C S^j'^e^-Tf^ ^tTNS''^/^' ^ ^ ^ (^y ('lilMSTOrilKK KILBY: MEMOIR FKKPAKKi) Koi: iirii; NEVy-ENGLAND HISTORICAL AND GENEALOGICAI. REGISTER J ANU ARY, 1872 ■^ g/p),6V>-^ .^(^ 1^ ---c/a^C^iC^^ >^^}^ Qass - C .7 Bonk . 3< 4 ^ // CHRISTOPHER KILBY: MEMOIR ^1 i" PREPARED FOR THE NEW-ENGLAND HISTORICAL AND GENEALOGICAL REGISTER JANUARY, 1872, CHARLES W. TUTTLE. BOSTON: Printed by david clapp & son. 1872. p. GHRISTOPHEll KILBY, OF BOSTON. The capacity, public services, wealth and liberality of Christopher Kilby, place him among the worthies of Boston of the last century. While he lived abroad most of his days and died there, and while most of his living posterity are now in England and Scotland, he was, ncA'crthelcss, a son of Boston, began his public life here, remembered his native town in its afflic- tion, bequeathed his name to one of its most public streets, and a few of his posterity still live here. Although his name appears frequently in the records of his time, is mentioned by Hutchinson, Drake, and other histori- ans, and is memorably associated with Boston, but little is publicly known of his career and his connections. His personal history derives fresh inter- est from the fact that his great-granddaughter was the first wife of the seventh Duke of Argyll, the grandfather of the Marquess of Lome, who recently married Her Royal Highness, the Princess Louise, of England. Christopher Kilby was the son of John and Rebecca (Simpkins) Kilby, of Boston. He was born May 25, 1705, and bred to commercial pursuits. In 1720, he became a partner in business with the Hon. "William Clark.' a • The Hon. "William Clark was brother of the Hon. John Clark, of Boston, for many years speaker of the house of rejiresentatives, nnd frrandson of Dr. John Clark, an eminent physi- cian, whose portrait is in the Massac/iusetts Hist. Society Collections. Dr. Clark married Martha, sister to Sir Richard Saltonst.ill, one of the Massachusetts Bay Company. Mr. Clark was a member of tl»c house and provincial council. He was a mcrcliant, and had a large estate. He died in 17-4'?, leaving widow, Sarah, two sons, and two married daughters, Mr. Kilhv's wife being dead some years before. — See Descendants of Ihi Boston Gazette, July and Auj^jst, 1756. Doc. History of Xeto-Tor/c. 2 Boston Post Boy, April 7, 1760. Drake's History of Boston. Family tradition. 8 On his return to England he purchased a large estate in the parish of Dorking, county Surrey, where he « buUt a curious edifice called the priory, and several ornamental seats." Here he lived many years prior to his death, which took place in October, 1771. He left an immense estate, which he distributed among his seven grandchildren, after providing for his wife.^ Mr. Kilby was twice married. His first wife was Sarah, eldest daughter of the Hon. William Clark, whom he married Aug. 1 8, 1 72 G. Mrs. Kilby died April 12, 1739, about six months before her husband was sent, as agent, to England, leaving two young daughters, Sarah and Catherine.' A son Wil- liam died young. In 1742, his father-in-law Clark died, intestate, leaving a large estate. Kilby being in England, his warm personal friend, Thomas Hancock, an eminent merchant, and uncle to Governor John Hancock, was appointed guardian of Sarah and Catherine Kilby, and secured for them their share of their grandfother Clark's estate. Five years later they were sent to England, their father receiving them at Portsmouth. Catherine appears to have died soon after her arrival. Mr. Kilby was now married again, but had no other children. His second wife's name was Martha, and she survived him. Her family name is not known here. On Sarah Kilby, his surviving daughter, he bestowed eveiy advantage that wealth could command. She received the best education England could afford ; and in 1750, was betrothed to Nathaniel, only son of Capt. Nathaniel Cunningham, a merchant of the greatest wealth of any in Boston. His daughter Ruth married the celebrated James Otis, patriot and orator. Sarah Kilby returned to this country just before her marriage, which took place June 20, 1754. Mr. Cunningham settled in the fine mansion-house of his father, now deceased, situated on an eminence in Cam- bridge, now Brighton. In Price's view of Boston, taken in 1743, dedicated to Peter Faneuil, this house is a conspicuous object, and designated by name, being the finest mansion-house in the vicinity of Boston. Nathaniel Cunningham died near the end of the year 1756, leaving two infant chil- dren, Susanna and Sarah. > Allen's Ilistonj of Surrey and Sussex, vol. ii. Wliitmorc's Heraldic Journal. 2 " Last week dy'd siuUlcnly Mrs. Kill)y, Wife of Mr. Christopher Kilby of this Town Mcrclmnt, and Dangl.tor to tl,c IIo,.. William Clark, V.^q."-Boston Weekly News Letter' April 17, 1739. ' When the Earl of Loudoun visited Boston, a few months after tliis event, there came with him his aide-de-camp, Capt. Gilbert McAdam, as well as Kilby, who introduced his widowed daughter to Capt. IMcAdam. He was of an ancient Ayrshire family, and uncle to John Loudoun McAdam, the inventor of Macadamized roads. In September, 1757, Capt. McAdam mar- ried the widow Sarah Cunningham, and took her, and her two children, to New- York, the principal head quarters of the army. At the close of the war, possibly before, Capt. McAdam returned to Ayrshire with his family.* Susanna and Sarah Cunningham were the special objects of Kilby's bounty and solicitude. They were sent to France, and there educated with care. Their domestic lives, and the lives of their descendants, are invested with an air of romance. Susanna was thrice married. Her first husband was James Dalrymple' of Orangefield, Ayrshire, the friend and patron of Robert Burns. By this marriage she had one son, Charles Dalrymple, an officer of the British army. Through subsequent marriages, first with John Henry Mills and afterwards with William Cunningham, both of Scot- land, she is now represented, in this country, by her grandchildren, Mrs. Frances Maria Spoffiard, wife of the venerable Dr. Richard S. SpofFord, of Newburyport, Mrs. Susanna Varnum Mears, of Boston, and Capt. Thomas Cunningham, of Somerville. Her sister, Sarah Cunningham, married AVil- liam Campbell, of Ayrshire, and had two daughters, the eldest of whom, Elizabeth, married the seventh Duke of Argyll, grandfather of the present Marquess of Lome.' The following is a copy of an original letter from Christopher Kilby to Thomas Hancock, before referred to. Dear Hancock, Spring Garden, 18 July, 1746. I am greatly oblig'd for the dispatch in Lumber and Bricks to New- foundland, and for your advice of the vessels arrival there. The Louisburg affair ' Kilby's Letters. Family papers. 2 In one of Burns's letters, he writes thus, of Dalrymple : " I have met in Mr. Dalrym- ple, of Orangefield, what Solomon emphatically calls, ' a friend that sticketh closer than a brother.' " 3 Burke's Peerage and Landed Gentry. 2 10 is not in the deplorable case you hare imagined. Capt. Castide' is Engineer, and the thing lays with him and his oflScers ; and I think you cannot fail of a seasonable part if any advantage is to be had ; but these officers arriving and a great sum of Sterling money to be spent amongst you I should think Exchange must be constantly lowering till this service is over, and however that may be you'll certainly not want as much of their money as I should think you would be willing to take. I have mention- ed you to most of the Staff Officers on this Expedition." Mr. Abercrombic,' who is Muster Master General, having directions to you in his Pocket-book, and if it should be necessary will introduce j'ou to the General,* to whom indeed you'll not need it, but apply to him as easy as possible with the use of my name, and I hope he will receive you as my best Friend. We have been often together since his return to Town, and I believe he has a good ojiinion of my services in recovering the Expedi- tion after it was laid aside. Pray do him all the service you can, and if you find it not inconvenient offer him a lodging in your house for a night or two, till he can be otherwise accommodated. His Power is great and may be useful to j'ou, he is honest open and undissembling ; you'll like hioi very well on increasing your acquaintance. Belcher* has got the Government of tlie Jerseys ; it was done by Duke of New- castle yesterday which neither Dr. Avery"^ nor I expected two days before. I have not seen the Dr. since the appointment, nor shall till his return to Town on Tuseday next. The vessel that brought the News from Boston, was several days beloAV be- fore her bag of Letters came up, and its said the Advice was sent in the mean time to Belcher's Friends. It's a shocking affair, and must destroy any favoiable opinion entertained of the Duke of Newcastle by the People of the Colonies ; and I am of opinion it will lessen Gov'r Sliirley's Influence in his own and in the Neighboring Governments. There is a very worthy set of people in tlie Jers^eys that it will most fatally prejudice. I fear they have been almost ruined by Law without a possibility of getting so far thro' it as to have an appeal home, and I am mistaken if same of 1 Jolin Henry Bastidc, royal engineer for Nova-Scotia. In April, 1745, Massachuf-estts granted him £140 for liis services in the repairs of the furts in this province. He was made (lirectw of engineers in 1748, and afterward raised to the rank of major-general. 2 Tliis expedition was designed to proceed against Canada. A squadron under Admiral Warren was to go to Quebec by way of the St. L,awrence, and a land force to Montreal by way of Albany under the command of Gen. St. Clair. Tlic English troops collected at Portsmouth, Eng., and sailed several times, but returned. They finally sailed for France, and the Canada exiK'dition was al)andoned. Killjy's letter indicates that they were to come to Boston ; at least the i)rincipal offlcers. 3 Gen. James Abcrcrombie; he was next in command to the Earl of Loudoun in 1756; he connnandcd the English forces sent against Ticonderoga in 1758. ■* Lieut. Gen. James St. Clair. * Jonathan Belcher, provincial governor of Massachusetts from 1730 to 1741. ^ Dr. Benjamin Avery, a man of the greatest influence at court about this time. u them have not defended their possessions by fire and sword ; they will bo in fine hands under Belcher, who is to be the Tool of the Quakers, as they are one would imagine of Satan. Some time past this seemed to be allotted for lue' by the desire of the Gentlemen who came from thence who had engaged Dr. Avery's Inter- est to perfect it, and it was nicntioned to, and approved of [by] the Duke of Newcastle. The vacancy lias at last happened when it was impossible for me to accept it, and after consulting the Doctor we had laid a Plan for keeping the appointment oiF till we could hear from our Friends, which neither he nor I have done by the ships that bring the News of ^Morris's^ death, nor had many months before. But the Duke^ differing in this Instance from every other circumstance of this sort during his Ad- ministration, has fis't the thing in the greatest hurry (on some other motive cer- tainly, than the Interest of the Quakers). As the thing concerns myself I am in no pain not having been defeated ; but as it may be hurtful to the honest people who are to fall under his Government and will stagger and discountenance the very best people in our own and the neighboring Colonies, it gives me much concern. This Letter must be broke off here to go to Portsmouth where the Ships tarry, and [ifj anything occurs I shall back it by another, being Dear Sir, Your most sincere Friend and obliged humble Servant, To Chris. Kilby. Mr. Thomas Hancock, Merchant in Boston, [To the granLkliildrcn of Susanna Cunningliam, aliove named, I am indebted for permis- sion to examine letters and family papers in their possession relating to the subject of this memoir. I am i-.lso indebted to Charles L. Hancock, Esq., for information contained in letters of Killiy and others, in his possession.] ' Provincial governor of New-Jersey. Kilby's aspirations were not behind those of otLcr Massachnsctts agents, who always aspired for royal appointments as soon as they got fairly Anglicized. 2 Lewis Morris, ancestor of a very distinguished fiimilj-, was chief-justice of New York, and afterward governor of New-Jerse.y. He died Ma}- 21, 1746. ^ Duke of Newcastle, minister of British America, from 1724 to 1748. " Newcastle was of so (icklc a head, and so treacherous a heart that Walpole called his name ' Perfidy.'" — Bancroft's History. BJa'12