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11101 http://books.google.com/books?id=sju7AAAAIAAJ&pg=PA203&lpg=PA203&dq=%22joseph+porter%22+jericho&source=bl&ots=-uKFiKzFGs&sig=sVuphZVdCBHuypuINCLAPlF1vlw&hl=en&sa=X&ei=uzbEUq-kDsmrkAeQkoCwDw&ved=0CEEQ6AEwAw#v=onepage&q=%22joseph%20porter%22%20jericho&f=false
Joseph Porter the son of William and Mary Hodges Porter was born at Hartford Vt and died at Jericho Vt July 9 1829 je 33 He read law with the Hon Joseph Bell DC 1807 at Haverhill and settled in practice at Jericho in 1824 A fall from a horse caused his death He married Laura Bliss of Jericho
 
Porter, Joseph (I15659)
 
11102 http://books.google.com/books?id=sju7AAAAIAAJ&pg=PA203&lpg=PA203&dq=%22joseph+porter%22+jericho&source=bl&ots=-uKFiKzFGs&sig=sVuphZVdCBHuypuINCLAPlF1vlw&hl=en&sa=X&ei=uzbEUq-kDsmrkAeQkoCwDw&ved=0CEEQ6AEwAw#v=onepage&q=porter&f=false
John Foster Porter the son of the Hon John and Jane Frances Foster Porter was born at Hartford Vt May 11 1834 He taught at Troy NY reading law at the same time with Seymour and Van Santvoord began practice there and still remains has held the office of City Justice from Mar 1 1861 to Mar 1 1862. 
Porter, John Foster (I11987)
 
11103 http://books.google.com/books?id=sju7AAAAIAAJ&pg=PA378&lpg=PA378&dq=%22philetus+fales%22&source=bl&ots=-tHAmICDCp&sig=K2-iLNyRSAopmKA_QUusohMFeTc&hl=en&ei=IB6-SqncBcnT8Aat8fS_AQ&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=8#v=onepage&q=%22philetus%20fales%22&f=false
Sketches of the alumni of Dartmouth college: from the first graduation in ...
By George Thomas Chapman
[Class of 1849]
"Philetus Fales, A. M. the son of Dea. Waterman and Sybil (Robbins) Fales, was born at Thomaston, Me, May 7, 1825. He soon went to Europe and amused himself with making a pedestrian tour with Daniel M'Farland, a classmate of the partial course ; returning, became a teacher in the Polytechnical Institute of Washington Univ. St Louis, Missouri; was residing at Manhattan, Kan. when last heard from."

http://www.archive.org/stream/militaryrecordof00redi/militaryrecordof00redi_djvu.txt
"Military record of the sons of Dartmouth in the Union Army and Navy, 1861-1865"
[Class of] 1849. Philetus Fales: Enlisted in April, 1861, in Des iMoines, la., in Captain Crocker's company. The company was organized too late to be mustered into three months' ser- vice, and was mustered, early in 1861, into the service for three years, at Keokuk, la., as Company D of the Second Iowa Infantry. Mr. Fales was with the regiment in its many chases after the rebel guerillas, in Missouri, in the Grand Flotilla of General Fremont from St. Louis to Bird's Point, and there in camp under Gen. U. S. Grant, in September, when he was discharged in order to take the superintend- ency of a State institution for the blind, in St. Louis, ]Mo.


http://ottawalibrary.pbworks.com/f/F.txt
Fales, Philetus Born 1825 in Maine; Died 1907
Andreas - 607-8
Kansas Historical Society Index - 140
Western Home Journal - 1866 (1-11)
Ottawa City Directory: 1873-1887
GAR - Book I-27
1885 Atlas - Lincoln S-11
Franklin County Family File
Probate Court File - F-1552
Buried: Highland Cemetery
Census: 1870 Ottawa Ward 3 - 90; 1875 Ottawa city - 315

Cemetery Stone - Photo:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/civilwar_veterans_tombstones/2997297879/in/set-72157608608656459/ 
Fales, Philetus (I45474)
 
11104 http://books.google.com/books?id=sju7AAAAIAAJ&pg=PA436&lpg=PA436&dq=%22Samuel+everett+hoar%22&source=bl&ots=-uFxhECzzj&sig=0fXveiwKwxDYZqjmG_5FbmZxPlI&hl=en&sa=X&ei=TMxMT8vDAYrY0QG7kN3fAg&sqi=2&ved=0CCYQ6AEwAQ#v=onepage&q=%22Samuel%20everett%20hoar%22&f=false
"Samuel Everett Hoar the son of Reuben Hoar was born at Littleton Ms Oct 3 1830 He studied divinity at East Windsor Theo Sem Ct "

[[Email from Joan Price:
Some of the family seem to disagree on his name -- Henry or Sam?-- but only one thing is known in the current living generation or written about Henry, as far as I know. That is, I have heard that Henry was a sewing machine salesman and he went off on his route and simply disappeared forever. I assume this is before1880, as his wife Martha and family are listed in that census, living then with Martha's brother, E.H. Price in Gold Run, California. Martha "Hour" is listed as married. By the 1900 census she had been remarried, widowed and with a child Paul Jackman. b. 1887. 
Hoar, Rev. Samuel (I13436)
 
11105 http://books.google.com/books?id=sTsEAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA1010&lpg=PA1010&dq=%22eusebia+hoar%22&source=bl&ots=fdQCHPVQN8&sig=LyVCLoiiX1GvyPr_AZwnWfQ0xTQ&hl=en&ei=zduvSvT1BpWzlAej0e3VBg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1#v=onepage&q=hymeneus%20chandler&f=false
The Kelloggs in the Old world and the New, Volume 2 - By Timothy Hopkins


http://www.usgennet.org/usa/topic/historical/cherokee_5.html (With photo)
HYMENEUS C. KELLOGG was born on August 15, 1824, in the town of Tinmouth, Rutland County, Vermont. His father, Frederick Kellogg, was a native of Windham County, in the same State, and descended from an old family of South Hadley, Massachusetts. This family was of English ancestry and dates back to the colonial days of America. Mr. Kellogg's mother was also a native of Vermont, having been born in Windsor County. Her maiden name was Sophia Ranney. Hymeneus grew to manhood in his native county, receiving a good education, and laying the foundation for a successful career in life. He went to Poultney in the same county and commenced to read law, and was finally admitted to the bar in the year 1846. He practiced his profession for a time in Vermont, but soon went to Boston, Massachusetts, where he lived tow years variously engaged. In the same year in which he completed his legal studies he was married to Miss Elizabeth E. Wheeler, a native of Vermont and a daughter of Jonathan R. and Eusebia (Hoar) Wheeler, of Massachusetts, the marriage taking place in Pittstown, New York. On leaving Boston he returned to his native State, where he remained until the year 1855, when, attracted by the glowing accounts of the wonderful opportunities open to young men in the newly developing West, he left his native State and removed to Quasqueton, Buchanan County, Iowa. At the time of his location in this county it had not been organized, and the country was characterized by all those features so peculiar to newly settled regions, and so well known to every one experienced in frontier life. Here Mr. Kellogg lived until the year 1869, following his profession and dealing in real estate, and also being engaged to some extent in farming operations. Not being fully satisfied with his surroundings, and wishing to again change his location, he, in company with his son-in-law, Charles H. Lewis, came to Cherokee County, in this State, in early spring of 1869, with a view to locating in the county if the prospects were sufficiently promising. They arrived in Cherokee, or what was then called Cherokee, on the 22d day of May, 1869, having driven for a long distance over the unsettled prairies of Northwestern Iowa. Although there was then no town in the county, yet the tide of immigration was so great, and so many were coming to take up the free, fertile lands then subject to homestead entry, and the prospect of the advent of a railroad in the coming year being so bright, Mr. Kellogg and his son-in-law concluded that it was the place for them to settle. This they did, and their families soon followed them to the new home. Mr. Lewis had taken a course of legal study in the Iowa Law School, and had been admitted to the bar, and a firm was formed by the name of Kellogg & Lewis, being the first law firm in the county. A new town, called Blair City, was started on a site about a mile north of the present town of Cherokee, and during the summer and fall of 1869 grew apace with the tide of immigration, until it numbered quite a respectable village. Here Messrs. Kellogg & Lewis followed their profession, and the real-estate firm also did a large business. Mr. Kellogg's ability and energy soon placed him in the front rank of those who were struggling to build up the interests of the town and county. The railroad having been completed through from Fort Dodge to Sioux City in the spring of 1870, and the present town of Cherokee having been located, the new firm, in common with the rest of the inhabitants of Blair City, put their homes and offices on wheels and moved to the new town. Here their legal business grew and Mr. Kellogg was soon recognized as one of the foremost lawyers of this section. While not a man who was given to the close study and investigation of legal questions, yet, from his strong, innate common sense, he was enabled to arrive at conclusions on legal problems that were usually consonant with legal principles, for the reason that law is supposed to be the perfection of common sense. In addition to this faculty of arriving at sound conclusions on legal questions he also possessed a very high order of oratorical ability, the display of which in the legal forum soon made him well known as a successful jury pleader, and his eloquence was always more feared by the other members of the bar than his knowledge of the law. In 1871 his partner, Mr. Lewis, was elected to the office of district attorney of the Fourth Judicial District, and this fact gave prominence to the firm. As the county developed the business of the firm increased. In the fall of 1874 Mr. Lewis was elected by the Republicans to the office of judge of the Fourth Judicial District, a position which he has held ever since. This rendered a dissolution of the old firm necessary on the 1st of January, 1875, when Judge Lewis took his seat on the bench. Mr. Kellogg carried on the law business alone until the month of May, 1875, when he formed a partnership with Mr. E. C. Herrick, a young attorney, and the firm was from then until Mr. Kellogg's retirement from practice in the fall of 1882 known as Kellogg & Herrick. In October, 1882, having grown tired of the turmoil and strife consequent on the practice of the law, and wishing to lead a less active life, Mr. Kellogg sold out his interest to his partner and retired to his farm near Cherokee, where he has since resided, carrying on one of the finest farms in the county. His first wife had died in Quasqueton, Iowa, in the year 1877, leaving surviving her four children: Mrs. Emma E. Lewis, the wife of Judge Lewis, now a resident of Sioux City, Iowa; Mary E., wife of Henry Ackenback, of Spencer, Iowa; Fred. R., just entering into manhood, and residing at home, and Darwin H., a younger son, who is at Lake Charles, Louisiana. Mr. Kellogg was married again in the year 1879, to Mrs. Rachel S. Soper, of Buchanan County, a lady of fine social attainments, good common sense, and possessed of business judgment far beyond the average of her sex. In politics Mr. Kellogg was a thorough Republican in the early history of the party. His father was a Whig, and supported John C. Fremont in 1856. Mr. Kellogg remained loyal to the Republican party until recent years. Being a man of independent thought and conviction, and acknowledging no right in any one or any party to dictate his political course, he has come to be known as an Independent. He cordially supported the prohibitory movement in Iowa, and is inclined to believe that the full efficacy of prohibition can be found only in absolute national control of the traffic. Until within the last few years he took an active part in county politics, and was generally regarded as the most successful politician in the county. From the beginning of its active history the county of Cherokee, like all other communities, has felt the full force of political strife and contention. these local controversies have at times in the past been exceedingly warm and sometimes rather stormy. Having an aptitude for such warfare, and being at the same time a leading man in the community, it was but natural that Mr. Kellogg should become warmly enlisted on the one side or the other, as his judgment and personal feelings might carry him. When once so enlisted no man in the community ever had any reason to doubt where he stood or what friend he was working for. He never asked or wanted an office for himself. If a friend could get it with his help, he was satisfied. He never flinched from a public avowal of his feelings, or his political affiliations, and all a man had to do to find out where he stood was either to ask him, or watch his political actions. No man was ever truer to a friend. When he went into a campaign to work for one, it was always with a grim determination to win if possible. He hates vie and loves the good. As would be expected from such a nature, he met with opposition that at times even became bitter, and by some he was disliked. But conscious in the rectitude of his own motives, he cared little for the adverse judgment of his enemies. Knowing that he who is the friend of everybody is rarely, if ever, the true friend of anybody, he sticks to his friends and lets his enemies take care of themselves. He is a man of most genial and kindly disposition, sympathetic in his nature, and has a warm and responsive heart. No man will sooner forgive a foe and forget an injury. Although not as careful in looking after the acquisition of wealth as most men, yet he has prospered in a financial sense and has a competency for his old age. He owns a beautiful farm situated close to the town of Cherokee, and seems thoroughly contented in cultivating his broad acres. He has stocked it with a fine herd of cattle and with the best breeds of hogs, and has every facility for the successful prosecution of the farm and stock business. Mr. Kellogg is a man who is possessed of natural talents far above the usual order. While a great reader, and a well-posted man on all questions of public interest, yet hard study was ever irksome to him. As before stated, he is a man of very superior oratorical ability, and he never fails to secure they sympathy of an audience and to delight those who listen to him, by his glowing eloquence and keen wit. It is not too much to say that had he cultivated his talents in this direction he would have made himself one of the leading public speakers of the day. He possesses the power of appealing to the noblest part of human nature in the most effective manner, and of stirring up the good feelings of an audience with his pungent and sparkling wit. Mr. Kellogg has passed twenty years in Cherokee County, and has been thoroughly identified with its growth and history during that period. He has seen it develop from an unsettled expanse of raw prairie into a blooming garden spot of thrift and prosperity. He is an honored citizen of a happy and peaceful community, and is the recipient of the general good will of the people. 
Kellogg, Hymeneus Chandler (I34541)
 
11106 http://books.google.com/books?id=ttEOAAAAYAAJ&pg=RA2-PA38&lpg=RA2-PA38&dq=%22de+la+hooke%22+Plymouth+England&source=bl&ots=K3WF_Vl5Cb&sig=4mV5Is_mKbZQZGHXz67h7-ZSRTw&hl=en&ei=mZOBSuLKMYP0NZPNhJgL&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1#v=onepage&q=%22de%20la%20hooke%22%20&f=false

http://www.denisonfamily.on.ca/FamilyTree/Dir03/25180874.htm

http://www.archive.org/stream/cihm_00470/cihm_00470_djvu.txt
Dr. James Acland De La Hooke Was born at Plymouth, England, November, 1814. His father, James Hooke (properly and anciently De La Hooke), was an attorney, and was married to Augusta Dillon, of Cornwall, England. Some years afterwards he went to Cambridge, and was ordained a minister of the Church of England, and became the Rector of Upper and Lower Gravenhurst, Bedfordshire, It may be mentioned that one of his ancestors, whose name was James De La Hooke, took a fancy to have his name on the dial of his watch ; but the " De La " was omitted, leaving only "James Hooke." For a long time after, the famil)' went by the name of Hooke, until the doctor's father, in 1825, restored the original name, and since then the family has been known both in England and Canada as " De La Hooke." In 1830, young De La Hooke became an articled student of William Wooton, M.R.C.S., at Harold, County Bedford, and his indentures were transferred to W. M. Tracey, M.R.C.S,, St. James' Square, London, with whom he remained until the expiration of his indentures. During that time he attended lectures on chemistrj^ at the Royal Institution, delivered by Brande and Faraday ; Anatomj'^ at the Hunterian Theatre, Windmill Street ; Practice of Medicine, Midwifery and Hospital Practice at St. George's Hospital ; Surgery, Forensic Medicine, Materia Medica and Botany at King's College ; and Surgical Practice at Vniyersity Coilege Mospita* under Robert Liston. In 1836 he obtained his license from Apothecaries' Hall. In 1837 he was admitted a member of the Royal College of Sur- geons, England. On his arrival in Toronto, 1839, he applied to the Governor for a provincial license, and was told by the Secretary to make application to the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Upper Canada, and undergo an examination before he could practise, which, with reluctance and a natural feeling of injured pride at such an ordeal, possessing as he did diplomas from England, he submitted to, and was granted a license. It will be seen in the proceedings of the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Upper Canada, that Dr. De La Hooke was the first person to receive its Diploma. On June 1, 1839, Dr. De La Hooke landed at Toronto, where BiouRAPHicAL Sketches. 325 he remained a week, and then located at Weston, Ontario, and commenced practice. The following spring he removed to Goderich and practised for throe years, when he took up his residence on the London Road, near the Bayfield River, a mile from the now village of Clinton, formerly called Reid's Corners, a tavern being, at that time, the only building there. In 1844, he married Miss Sarah England, a native of Canterbury, Eng- land, who had been on a visit to her brother-in-law, James Gordon. Dr. De La Hooke, after marriage, went to Ohio and commenced practice at Cumminsville, on the Miami Canal. Owing to bad health he soon returned to Weston, where his wife died, January, 1845. In 1847, he married Maria Loui.sa Denison, daughter of Captain Thomas John Denison, of Retire- ment Vale. In 1870, he removed to Toronto, where he now (1894) resides. His wife died, July 1, 1887. They lived to- gether forty years, and had six sons and one daughter. Three of the sons are now alive, James Acland, Edwin Dillon Alex- ander, and Thomas Denison Auley. 
Hooke, James (I44222)
 
11107 http://books.google.com/books?id=UK0FAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA125&lpg=PA125&dq=%22elnathan+hoar%22&source=bl&ots=L28SMSDBq0&sig=GsVS8OcH3dK44H_dXBsYjRHnIIA&hl=en&ei=JKqrSuPrCs_UlAfE9ZS8Bg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=2#v=onepage&q=hoar&f=false
FRIDAY, MARCH 12, 1830.
Mr. Stephens, from the select committee to which was referred the petition of Joseph Hoar jun. reported :
That the petitioner represents that there are unpleasant associations connected with the pronunciation of his name, embarrassing in society. He asks leave to assume the name of Joseph H. Homer, and the committee see no objection to the request of the petitioner, and have therefore directed their chairman to ask leave to introducc a bill.
Ordered, That leave be given to bring in such bill.
Mr. Stephens, according to leave, brought in the said bill, entitled "An act to authorise Joseph Hoar junior to alter his name ;" which was read the first time, and by unanimous consent was also read a second time, and committed to a committee of the whole house.

http://books.google.com/books?id=5EA4AAAAIAAJ&pg=PA33&lpg=PA33&dq=%22elnathan+hoar%22&source=bl&ots=AivydKEmrb&sig=k4_e9dvi0rn-LAd8-JIu_X9Gm_c&hl=en&ei=VrCrSuS1BM7qlAfH7ZXaBg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=3#v=onepage&q=hoar&f=false
Chap. 218.
AN ACT to authorise Joseph Hoar junior, to alter his
name.
Passed April 16, 1830.
The People of the State of New-York, represented in Senate and Assembly, do enact as follows :
S 1. It shall be lawful for Joseph Hoar junior, of the city of New-York, formerly of Homer in the county of Cortland, to assume the name of Joseph H. Homer, by which name he shall hereafter be known. 
Hoar, Joseph Jr. (I44776)
 
11108 http://books.google.com/books?id=V08DAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA398&dq=Hoar+born+Canada&lr=&ei=92PIR-aUHNC4igHl0cGFBQ Hoar, Bertha (I26657)
 
11109 http://books.google.com/books?id=v6QUAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA22-IA4&lpg=PA22-IA4&dq=potwin+corrigan&source=bl&ots=AkIx6pRaOU&sig=eoEx-JoNgS37b6dCbqWcV1Z34Ns&hl=en&ei=oL_ASoLVNcil8Aavx-2zAQ&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=2#v=onepage&q=potwin%20corrigan&f=false
CHARLES E. CORRIGAN? From pioneer achievements in the development of the electric automobile Charles E. Corrigan turned to other activities in electric manufacturing, and since 1907 he has been associated with Pittsburgh interests as vice-president of the National Metal Molding Company. His reputa
tion as an organizer and industrialist is national, and he has received international honors for his accomplishments in the electrical field. Now permanently identified with Pittsburgh interests, he has distinguished place in her annals.
Mr. Corrigan is a son of John and Charlotte (Heffernan) Corrigan, and grandson of James and Bridget (Hughes) Corrigan, his grandparents natives of Ireland, who came to the United States in 1834. John Corrigan, his father, was born in County Tyrone, Ireland, June 24, 1831, and came to the United States with his parents as a child of three years. He became a dealer in live stock in New York and Canada, was later an agriculturist, and as a Democrat, held public offices in Lewis county, N. Y. His wife, Charlotte (Heffernan) Corrigan, was a daughter of James and Helen Heffernan. of Martinsburgh, N. Y. Their children were: James, deceased; Charles E., of whom further; Gertrude and George, residents of Chicago, 111.; and Vincent, of Pittsburgh.
Charles E. Corrigan was born in Martinsburgh, Lewis county, N. Y., Aug. 29, 1863, and after attending the public schools became a student in Lowville Academy, whence he was graduated in 1883. His first business association was with seedsmen of Minneapolis, Minn., and after a short time in this connection he took up pioneer work in the production of electric automobiles. His work was noteworthy in a history-making degree, and constant success attended his efforts. His work began in Chicago, 111., about 1892, and he issued the first automobile catalogue distributed by an American manufacturer. He became president and general manager of the American Electric Vehicle Company, and at the World's Fair in Paris, France, in 1900, Mr. Corrigan received from the Republic of France a gold medal in recognition of his work. Just before 1900 he moved his plant from Chicago to Hoboken, N. J., and was there located during the remainder of his continuance in automobile manufacture. In this day when automobiles, gasoline and electric driven, congest metropolitan streets to a degree that raises serious question as to future traffic routes, and when every country road is dotted with hundreds of tourists, it is interesting to note that in 1896 Mr. Corrigan received from the West Chicago park commissioners a permit "to pass over the boulevard and through parks with his vehicle by electricity," and that in 1900 the Department of Parks of the City of New York granted him permission "to enter upon and pass over the drives of the Central Park with an electric pleasure carriage."
In 1901, Mr. Corrigan sold his automobile manufacturing holdings and engaged in the manufacture of electrical conduits, organizing the Osborn Flexible Conduit Company of New York. In 1907, Mr. Corrigan came to Pittsburgh and his organization merged with the National Metal Molding Company, the largest concern of its character in the world, of which he became vice-president. He has devoted himself almost exclusively to the demands of this important industrial interest, and the flourishing prosperity that it has experienced throughout all of its existence has been largely due to his rare executive ability and wise guidance. Mr. Corrigan is one of the foremost figures in the electrical manufacturing world today, and throughout the United States his reputation for progressiveness and original thought is widely known.

In political belief Mr. Corrigan is a Republican, and although public office is outside of his province, his influence and support are always upon the side of forward-looking, efficient government. He is a member of the Electrical Manufacturers' Club and the Associated Manufacturers of Electrical Supplies of New York, and the New York Electrical Society. Hisclubs are: The Duquesne, Pittsburgh Press, Pittsburgh Country, Americus Republican, the Old Colony, being a member of the National Advisory Board of the latter, and the Au Sable Trout and Game, of which last named organization he is president. He is also a member and vice-president of the Civic Club of Allegheny county, and a member of the Pittsburgh Athletic Association. In religious faith he is a Roman Catholic, being a member of the Sacred Heart Church. To Mr. Corrigan has fallen the lot of leadership in important enterprises, and the success of the projects with which he has been connected has lain in the willing cooperation he has been able to secure from his scientific and industrial colleagues. He is a highly regarded and generally well liked member of the Pittsburgh business fraternity. Mr. Corrigan married, in Chicago, 111., Feb. 6, 1895; Alice Melita Potwin, daughter of Henry and Annie (Smith) Potwin, of that city. Mrs. Corrigan is a member of the Daughters of the American Revolution, interested in philanthropic and charitable work in the city, and a member of several women's clubs, including the Tuesday Musical Club. Mr. and Mrs. Corrigan are the parents of: I. Ruth Frances, born July 6, 1896; educated in the Pittsburgh schools, Ursuline Academy of Pittsburgh, and Marymount Academy of Tarrytown, N. Y., being graduated from the last named school in the class of 1915; married Walter Gordon Frauenheim. 2. John Potwin, born Jan. it, 1898; pursued preparatory studies at Mount St. Mary's College, Emmitsburg, Md., and East Liberty Academy, Pittsburgh, and then matriculated at Cornell University. On April 7, 1917, the day following the entry of the United States into the World War, he enlisted as a seaman in the United States navy at Newport, R. I. Later he was commissioned ensign, and served on the U. S. S. "Saranac," attached to the mine laying division, "suicide fleet," in the North Sea. This division accomplished work that by many naval authorities was deemed impossible, and its value in almost stopping enemy operations equalled that of any other single achievement of the war. Ensign Corrigan won high commendation from his superior officers for his devotion to duty, and was discharged from the service in February, 1919. He immediately resumed his work at Cornell University and was graduated with the degree of Bachelor of Arts in 1920. He took a leading part in college activities, and prior to his enlistment, while in his junior year, was manager of the varsity baseball team, and upon his return from the service was elected manager of the "Masque." In 1920 he was nominated by the faculty of Cornell University to represent Pennsylvania in Rhodes Scholarship competition. He is still retained on the officers' reserve list
of the United States navy, and is now associated with the National Metal Molding Company. 3. Mary Alice, born Dec. 19, 1899, now (1920) attending the Brownson School of New York City. 4. Charles E., Jr., born Nov. 3, 1901, a graduate of Shadyside Academy, Pittsburgh, class of 1920, and now a student in Tulane University, New Orleans, La. 5. Francis Hughes, born Feb. 21, 1907.

See also:
http://www.archive.org/stream/biographicalhist00ffre/biographicalhist00ffre_djvu.txt 
Corrigan, Charles E. (I45582)
 
11110 http://books.google.com/books?id=WB-xAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA80&dq=Dix+Hoar+Hobart&hl=en&sa=X&ei=WVg7U_XFCPGk2gXj7oFw&ved=0CE0Q6AEwBQ#v=onepage&q=Dix%20Hoar%20Hobart&f=false Laws of the State of New York Passed at the Fifty-Eigth Session of the Legislature, New York State Legislative Bill Drafting Commission, (Wm. & A. Gould & Co.), KFN 5025 A2 Vol. 1835., Laws of the State of New York Passed at the Fifty-Eigth Session, 1835.
"Chap. 94 An act to authorize Dix Hoar and his family to change their name. Passed April 15, 1835. The people of the state of New York, represented in Senate and Assembly, do enact as follows; 1. Dix Hoar, of the town of Tully, in the county of Onondaga, may assume and take the surname of Hobart; and after the passage of this act he shall be called and known by the name of Dix Hobart, and the family of said Dix shall be known by the family name of Hobart."

Obituary:
Newspapers Syracuse NY Daily Courier 1860 - 0285.PDF http://fultonhistory.com/Newpapers%20Disk2/Syracuse%20NY%20Daily%20Courier/Syracuse%20NY%20Daily%20Courier%201860%20pdf/Newspapers%20Syracuse%20NY%20Daily%20Courier%201860%20-%200285.PDF
Died.? In Preble, Cortland County, N. Y.,
March 5th 1860, after six year's severe suffering
of Dropsey, Dier Hobart, aged 87 years.
Mr. Hobart was born in Brimfield, Hamden
county, Mass., in the year 1773. At the age of
nineteen, he shouldered his knap-sack, with
his clothes and axe, and started for the west.
He landed at Onondaga Hollow in the spring
of that year, and hired for the season to Gen.
Asa Danforth. After his term of service expired
with Mr. Danforth, he returned to his
native place. In the year 1792, in company
with Jesse Butler and two of his brothers, he
returned and settled on Pompey Hill, where he
resided for nineteen years. He then removed
to the town of Tully, where he buried his companion,
she leaving nine children. He subsequently
married a second wife Miss Susan
Shevelain, and settled on the west side of the
Crooked Lake in that town. He united with the
first Presbyterian Church that was organised at
Preble, and was a regular worshiper in that
church for almost thirty years.
The family name was originally HOAR, but
in tho year 1829, it was changed by the legislature
of this State, upon the petition of his
brother Aaron, to Hobart, but some of the relatives
out of the state did not see fit to adopt
the change.
He had been the father of eighteen children,
nine by each wife. Nine are now living, and
eight followed his remains to the grave on the
7th inst. Although he suffered very much
from bodily pain, he bore his affliction with patience
and christian resignation, for he gave
evidence in his last hours that he was like the
shock of corn, fully ripe, ready and fitted for
his Master's use. The funeral services were
conducted by Rev. Mr. Wakeman, pastor of
the Congregational Church at Lafayette.?
Sermon from the 10th verse of the 90th Psalm. 
Hoar, Dix (I11089)
 
11111 http://books.google.com/books?id=Wc0wAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA1649&lpg=PA1649&dq=%22Hoar%22+%22Dimock%22+pennsylvania&source=bl&ots=2-9KXFljb2&sig=QFn_DWPfNoVH5J-Kl0Cfo_e_EkQ&hl=en&sa=X&ei=V4f1ULG5EPO-0QHU8oDoAQ&sqi=2&ved=0CGcQ6AEwCQ#v=onepage&q=Hoar&f=false Hoar, James (I64911)
 
11112 http://books.google.com/books?id=Wc0wAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA1649&lpg=PA1649&dq=%22Hoar%22+%22Dimock%22+pennsylvania&source=bl&ots=2-9KXFljb2&sig=QFn_DWPfNoVH5J-Kl0Cfo_e_EkQ&hl=en&sa=X&ei=V4f1ULG5EPO-0QHU8oDoAQ&sqi=2&ved=0CGcQ6AEwCQ#v=onepage&q=Hoar&f=false Hoar, Thomas (I64910)
 
11113 http://books.google.com/books?id=wekpAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA1011&lpg=PA1011&dq=%22hoar%22+honesdale+pennsylvania&source=bl&ots=-IBZKKbEcz&sig=jDZI7eDhMfxAtks0h-_HnTgfHaU&hl=en&sa=X&ei=BaL1UIOTG-ip0AHng4CwBg&ved=0CFQQ6AEwBzgU#v=onepage&q=%22hoar%22%20&f=false

http://archive.org/stream/genealogicalfami02reyn/genealogicalfami02reyn_djvu.txt
Uriah E., son of Jonathan C. and Elizabeth R. (Wilber) Terwilliger, was born in the village of Ellenville, Ulster county, New York, December 10, 1849. His educa- tion was begun in the public schools of his na- tive town and continued at the Ellenville High School, conducted for long years by Professor S. A. Law Post, which was then an institution of considerable prominence. Later Mr. Ter- williger attended Waring's Military Institute, at Poughkeepsie, and the Hudson River Insti- tute, at Claverack, New York. At an early age comparatively he was compelled, because of impaired health, to abandon plans for extended study, and for three years engaged with his father, thus acquiring a practical knowledge of carpentry. A little later on, at nineteen years of age, he established a real estate and insurance agency. With characteristic enthusiasm Mr. Terwilliger quickly developed the business, and eventually, with partners, built up one of the largest general insurance agencies in the state. The firm's style for a number of years was Neafie & Terwilliger, then Neafie, Terwilliger & Post. For many years after Mr. Terwilliger's brother, Edward N., was his only associate in the firm which was familiarly known as U. E. and E. N. Terwilliger, and three years since, upon the admission of Bert H , only son of Mr. Terwilliger, the business became known and is now conducted as The Terwilliger Agency. In connection with this particular business Mr. Terwilliger was con- spicuously entrusted with many fiduciary interests as the executor and administrator of estates, and as the representative of various financial institutions throughout the county and elsewhere, until he became widely known for his business sagacity and unswerving hon- esty. Always deeply interested in local affairs, Mr. Terwilliger has given generously of time and money to matters of local weal. It was during his presidency of the board of educa- tion that the school system was advanced, a superintendent first employed, and the old high school property acquired for the use of the higher departments. A local Young Men's Christian Association and Board of Trade, both in active useful existence for many years owed their beginning to his enthusiasm. From early manhood he has been an active member of the Reformed church, with which he has long been officially connected, and for twelve years superintendent of its Sunday school. In politics Mr. Terwilliger has always been a Re- publican, until the advent of the Progressive party, with which he is now affiliated. He has invariably declined political honors, though frequently urged to accept nominations, from supervisor of the town to state senator. But it is perhaps in the development of his estate at Mount Meenahga, now famous as a summer resort, that Mr. Terwilliger has be- come most widely known. After some years of close application to business, necessity for rest manifested itself, and in 1877 Mr. Terwilliger and a party of friends formed a camp on the westerly side of the Shawangunks, two miles from EUenville. Impressed with the natural advantages and beauty of the location he made a lease of the property the following year, and three years later bought a tract of one hundred acres. With a view to making a permanent summer home, a comfortable cot- tage and barns were erected, and from time to time other cottages were built for the accom- modation of friends who sought more comfort- able quarters than a simple camp life afforded. Additional acres were bought from year to year, until finally the erection of a small boarding house, in t88i, marked the beginning of the present Mount Meenahga as a resort, now second in importance only to one other in the county. Lake Mohonk. The property now comnrises upwards of six hundred acres, controlling the bold face of the mountain for nearly two miles. On the north and south are tracts owned by the village of Ellenville, as a water preserve, numbering some five thousand acres, and assuring to Mount Meenahga for all time the advantages of a large forest domain. The work of development at Mount Meenahga has been along the lines of nature's plan, and rare genius has been displayed in the building of many miles of paths and roads that lead over the beautiful hilltops or through deep gorges, disclosing a wealth of beauty and grandeur at every turn. The hotel property is thoroughly modern in its equipment, and means for healthful recreation have been gen- erously provided. Mr. Terwilliger is one of the trustees of the EUenville Savings Bank and has been such for twenty-seven years, a wit- ness and abettor of its growth from $481,000 to over $2,000,000 in deposits. Mr. Terwilliger married Alice A. Hoar, daughter of George Hoar, prominent as a boat builder of Ellenville, New York. They have two children: i. Bert H., who married Florence Tone, of Bergen, New York; children: Robert S. and Katharine T. 2. Alice Louise, married Harold B. Raymond, son of President P. B. Raymond, of the Wesleyan University, of Middletown, Connecticut. 
Terwilliger, Uriah E. (I35406)
 
11114 http://books.google.com/books?id=Wm2ZnGGwSEAC&dq=horr+born
The Hamiltons of Waterborough (York County, Maine): their ancestors and descendents, 912-1912 By Samuel King Hamilton 
Thompson, Chester Garfield (I12926)
 
11115 http://books.google.com/books?id=X6VPAAAAMAAJ&pg=RA1-PA420&lpg=RA1-PA420&dq=%22Otis+Horr%22+OR+%22Horr+Otis%22&source=bl&ots=fRAX8NAI0y&sig=kzke2cG26cG3jwsA5VV7PTama8A&hl=en&ei=xYvFS5fNHJWC8wTJpcTlDw&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=5&ved=0CBYQ6AEwBA#v=onepage&q=%22Otis%20Horr%22%20OR%20%22Horr%20Otis%22&f=false

Groom's Name: Warren Squares
Groom's Birth Date:
Groom's Birthplace:
Groom's Age:
Bride's Name: Parmela Hoar
Bride's Birth Date:
Bride's Birthplace:
Bride's Age:
Marriage Date: 12 Aug 1835
Marriage Place: Ludlow,Hampden,Massachusetts
Groom's Father's Name:
Groom's Mother's Name:
Bride's Father's Name:
Bride's Mother's Name:
Groom's Race:
Groom's Marital Status:
Groom's Previous Wife's Name:
Bride's Race:
Bride's Marital Status:
Bride's Previous Husband's Name:
Indexing Project (Batch) Number: M50254-2
System Origin: Massachusetts-ODM
Source Film Number: 904737
Reference Number:
Collection: Massachusetts Marriages, 1695-1910 
Root, Parmelia (I9123)
 
11116 http://books.google.com/books?id=X6VPAAAAMAAJ&pg=RA1-PA420&lpg=RA1-PA420&dq=%22Otis+Horr%22+OR+%22Horr+Otis%22&source=bl&ots=fRAX8NAI0y&sig=kzke2cG26cG3jwsA5VV7PTama8A&hl=en&ei=xYvFS5fNHJWC8wTJpcTlDw&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=5&ved=0CBYQ6AEwBA#v=onepage&q=clough&f=false Root, Mary (I46536)
 
11117 http://books.google.com/books?id=X6VPAAAAMAAJ&pg=RA1-PA420&lpg=RA1-PA420&dq=%22Otis+Horr%22+OR+%22Horr+Otis%22&source=bl&ots=fRAX8NAI0y&sig=kzke2cG26cG3jwsA5VV7PTama8A&hl=en&ei=xYvFS5fNHJWC8wTJpcTlDw&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=5&ved=0CBYQ6AEwBA#v=onepage&q=clough&f=false Root, Timothy (I21826)
 
11118 http://books.google.com/books?id=XoeWEtcTtsMC&pg=RA1-PA103&lpg=RA1-PA103&dq=%22Tarrant+Putnam%22+merriam&source=bl&ots=HrJalbmYFd&sig=A9LvCVMA3738oNSfhWYNhD8h_O0&hl=en&ei=EGjQSrzkLZLQlAfaiJGpCg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1&ved=0CAsQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=hartwell&f=false
"A well known portrait painter." 
Hartwell, Alonzo (I46264)
 
11119 http://books.google.com/books?id=XoeWEtcTtsMC&pg=RA1-PA103&lpg=RA1-PA103&dq=%22Tarrant+Putnam%22+merriam&source=bl&ots=HrJalbmYFd&sig=A9LvCVMA3738oNSfhWYNhD8h_O0&hl=en&ei=EGjQSrzkLZLQlAfaiJGpCg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1&ved=0CAsQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=hartwell&f=false Merriam, Eliza Wheeler (I46265)
 
11120 http://books.google.com/books?id=YolJAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA20&dq=obituary+%2BHorr&lr=&ei=6fyKSt-iKKbKyQTEhO2fDg#v=onepage&q=Horr&f=false
VII. Genie Swan, daughter of Caleb, was born 1856, married Rensaliaer Horr; died, leaving two children, Harry and Estella Horr.

1880 United States Federal Census
Name: Genie S. Horr
Home in 1880: Westbrook, Cumberland, Maine
Age: 23
Estimated Birth Year: abt 1857
Birthplace: Maine
Relation to head-of-household: Wife
Spouse's name: R. C.
Father's birthplace: ME
Mother's birthplace: ME
Occupation: Keeping House
Marital Status: Married
Race: White
Gender: Female
Household Members: Name Age
R. C. Horr 28
Genie S. Horr 23
Harry B. Horr 3
Harlan P. Horr 1

Cemetery:
http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=38923755 
Swan, Genie (I7005)
 
11121 http://books.google.com/books?id=YolJAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA20&dq=obituary+%2BHorr&lr=&ei=6fyKSt-iKKbKyQTEhO2fDg#v=onepage&q=Horr&f=false Swan, Caleb (I44333)
 
11122 http://books.google.com/books?id=yW5ntLrIIvoC&pg=PA846&lpg=PA846&dq=%22john+b.+nutten%22+michigan&source=bl&ots=kMBIeuvEXF&sig=o3Xi2MSELi9gtoKQdQslOVo_l_w&hl=en&sa=X&ei=I1fIUq3QIfOksQSE3IHwDA&ved=0CEsQ6AEwBA#v=onepage&q=%22john%20b.%20nutten%22%20michigan&f=false
ALBERT CRANE The country home of this gentleman which is pleasantly located on section 23 in Moscow Township is especially noticeable for its highly cultivated fields its neat and substantial buildings the fine assortment of live stock cattle sheep and horses the thrifty apple orchard and the finer fruit trees adjacent to the dwelling It would be difficult to conceive a more desirable homestead or one which bears upon the face of it clearer evidence of the thrift and prosperity of its proprietor Mr Crane has been endowed by nature with flue business capacities and excellent judgment as an agriculturist and in his career as a general farmer and stock raiser has been more than ordinarily successful The representative of an old and excellent family our subject was born Aug 16 1815 in Taunton Mass and was the second of ten children the offspring of Turner and Phebe Arnold Crane who were also natives of the Bay State the father born in Taunton and the mother in Norton Both were of English ancestry and after their marriage settled in New Hampshire whence a few years later they removed to Wayne County NY and from there came to the Territory of Michigan as early as 1833 The father had learned the trade of a tanner during his early life but upon coming West necessarily changed his occupation and settling upon a tract of land in Madison Township Lenawee County began the cultivation of the soil and the up of a homestead among the pioneers of Southern Michigan He however did not live to fully out his plans his death taking place ten years later in June 1843 when he was fifty four years of age The mother survived her husband a quarter of a century her death taking place in 1868 when she was seventy two years old Of the ten children born to Turner and Phebe Crane seven are now living and residents of Michigan The first recollections of our subject were of his early home among the Massachusetts hills from which he was taken when a little lad He acquired a common school education and was seventeen years of age when the family started for the farther West The journey from Palmyra NY to Adrian occupied ten days Albert left the home roof soon afterward and commenced working in a distillery in the embryo town of Adrian being thus engaged until reaching his majority In 1845 occurred one of the most important events of his life namely his marrbge with Miss Dency daughter of Daniel and Rebecca Richmond Foster who were natives of Ontario County NY and Dighton Mass respectively This family also like that of the Cranes was of English descent Daniel Foster settled in Ontario County NY after his marriage whence they removed first to Pennsylvania and from there to Medina County Ohio becoming residents of the latter State in 1825 They came to Lenawee County Mich twelve years later and the father settled first in Dover Township of which the family continued residents until 1861 then came to this county settling in Hillsdale Township where the father passed away in 1862 when seventy six years old The mother had died early in life in Pennsylvania when Mrs Crane was but eleven years old The family circle included fourteen children ten sons and four daughters thirteen of whom grew to mature years Mrs Crane was the third child of her parents and was born June 25 1817 in Ontario County NY She was a little girl of seven years when her parents removed to Pennsylvania and thirteen when they became residents of the Buckeye State She was a maiden of seventeen when they came to this State and completed her education in the High School at Northville She had made good use of her opportunities and being competent as an instructor engaged in teaching for some time before her marriage She takes a pardonable pride in the fact that her maternal grandfather after being graduated from Yale College entered the Revolutionary army and was Colonel of a regiment under Gen Washington His brave and efficient service assured him a position in the front rank and he enjoyed the honor and satisfaction of being chiefly instrumental in the capture of Gen Burgoyne whose sword was handed over to Col Richmond as his legitimate trophy Tliis relic is now preserved by the Richmond family as an object of interest with which they would not willingly part The two children who came to bless the union of Mr and Mrs Crane are recorded as follows Marie A is the wife of John B Nutten a prosperous farmer of Moscow Township they have seven children namely Albert George F Wesley L May and Maude twins Gertrude and John B Jr Asa Crane married Miss Alice Clegg and they have two children a son and a daughter Arthur and Edith They reside in North Adams and young Mr Crane is retired from business The family is one of the most prominent and highly respected in this portion of Hillsdale County where Mr Crane by the establishment of one of its most creditable homesteads constitutes no unimportant factor in the development of its resources. 
Crane, Albert (I31062)
 
11123 http://books.google.com/books?id=yW5ntLrIIvoC&pg=PA846&lpg=PA846&dq=%22john+b.+nutten%22+michigan&source=bl&ots=kMBIeuvEXF&sig=o3Xi2MSELi9gtoKQdQslOVo_l_w&hl=en&sa=X&ei=I1fIUq3QIfOksQSE3IHwDA&ved=0CEsQ6AEwBA#v=onepage&q=Crane&f=false
Asa L.CRANE Prominent among the business men of Hillsdale County and occupying a leading position among the most enterprising citizens of North Adams is subject of our sketch He is of English origin the annals of the Crane family tell of an who came to America with the brave band of Pilgrims in 1620 on the Ma flower and settled in old Bay State The maternal grandfather of our subject who was born reared and spent several of his married life in Massachusetts removed Lenawee County Mich with his family in 1832 and taking up Government land became a pioneer Adrian where he spent the remainder of his life Albert Crane the father of our subject was born in Taunton Mass and came to Michigan with his parents He married Miss Dency Foster a native of Erie Pa and they established a home for themselves in Madison Township Lenawee County where they remained until 1854 Ihe following two years thej spent in Pittsford lownship and in 1856 deciding to make another change they moved to Moscow Township this county and are still residing in their pleasant home in that place spending their declining years in comfort being now seventy three and seventy one years of age respectively They have two children Mane A wife of JB Nuttcn of Moscow Township and Asa L The subject of this biographical notice was born Ma 29 1851 while his parents were living in Madison Township and was consequently three years of age when they made their first change of residence and five years old when they settled in their present home He went to school one summer in Pittsford Township and was a regular attendant when his health permitted at the public schools of Moscow during his boyhood He became the head of a household Oct 17 1870 being then united in the holy bonds of matrimony with Miss Alice daughter of Enoch and Alice Kenyon Clegg both natives of Lancastershire England They were married in Taunton Mass and remained there several years and then removed to Providence R 1 where Mrs Clegg died in 1863 at the age of thirty seven years leaving seven children two boys and five girls of whom Mrs Crane is fourth in order of birth Mr Clegg subsequently married Mrs Ann Jally by whom he had one child He was a machinist by trade and a self made man in every sense that that term implies He was very successful in his work and at the time of his death owned considerable property in Providence R L and in Taunton Mass Alice Clegg the wife of our subject was born in Taunton Mass July 17 1852 and received her education in the graded schools of that city When she was eleven years old her mother sdeath occurred and her elder sister having left home the household work devolved upon her and notwithstanding her extreme youth she was soon mistress of the situation and became a self reliant and tidy little housekeeper and the experience thus early acquired has developed her into a notable housewife She was married in her native city and afterward accompanied her husband to Michigan The first twelve years of their married life Mr and Mrs Crane spent on a farm they then moved to North Adams where Mr Crane engaged in carpentering He subsequently in partnership with Mr CJ Knapp bought out Fuller & Huff and has done a large business in drugs and also in the grocery trade He is a man of progressive ideas an energetic and ambitious temperament and a good financier making him an important factor of his communitj7 where he and his wife occupy a high social position To Mr and Mrs Crane have been born two children Arthur L and Edith A both of whom are attending school In the winter of 1887 88 in company with two congenial companions HC Langdon and OC Smith our subject made a most enjoyable trip through the Pacific States and Territories visiting the principal points of interest in Kansas Colorado New Mexico Arizona and California Mr Crane is a member of the Michigan Pharmacy Association and in politics is prominently identified with Republican party.
 
Crane, Asa Leonard (I34150)
 
11124 http://books.google.com/books?id=zlROAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA142&lpg=PA142&dq=%22fannie+c.+holton%22&source=bl&ots=pW7OzfQJlG&sig=r4V49S9A8YIitKj6VhE42NLbn_o&hl=en&sa=X&ei=hS_UUuaJHrSusATXqIH4DA&ved=0CFUQ6AEwBQ#v=onepage&q=holton&f=false
Since the preceding winter Miss Fannie C Holton had been slowly failing in health In September 1886 it became evident that she was in the first stage of consumption and her only earthly hope of throwing off the disease lay in escaping to another climate She started immediately for the West accompanied by a sister and after some delay among friends in Minnesota reached Santa Barbara Cal by the middle of October After three weeks there it seemed best to go on to Pasadena But here again she continued to fail until her death which occurred on the 19th of February 1887 Her remains were scut to Northfield where on the 2d of March in the great Hall of the Seminary was held a memorable funeral service The sermon was preached by Rev Franklin S Hatch who for some weeks had been supplying the pulpit of the Congregational Church in Northfield It was followed by a brief address from Mr Moody to whom the death of Miss Hoi ton was a profound bereavement She was his own cousin and had also for much of ten years been an intimate member of his family There had been no one on whose good judgment and unselfish devotion to the work he had more depended in developing the plans and furthering the interests of the Seminary and there has been no one person to whom the school is under greater obligation Beloved by her associates in work and by her pupils the beauty of her character and the wisdom of her government and instruction made upon many hearts deep and enduring impressions of good that cannot fail to find expression in many lives.

Cemetery:
http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GSln=holton&GSfn=fan&GSbyrel=all&GSdyrel=all&GSst=21&GScntry=4&GSob=n&GRid=70555677&df=all& 
Holton, Fannie Content (I70518)
 
11125 http://books.google.com/books?id=ZQTiAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA483&lpg=PA483&dq=%22turner+crane%22+lenawee&source=bl&ots=GoKLiAQf-m&sig=SsUGRCBhdGvukOVAc3SBrkR-fCI&hl=en&sa=X&ei=sBjIUrXpA-uhsASI7oHYDQ&ved=0CDwQ6AEwAg#v=onepage&q=%22turner%20crane%22%20lenawee&f=false
JOHN L HALL was born in Parma Monroe county NY SJ December 14 1813 where he resided until he was about twenty years old His father Nehemiah Hall was a farmer of Monroe county NY and died in Parma about the year 1820 He married Polly Atchinson danghter of Bezaleel and Mary tFuller Atchinson of Parma by whom he had five children John L being the fourth child and Mrs Allen Washburn of Adrian being the oldest Mrs Polly Hall was born in Tolland Conn in 1783 and died in Quincy Branch county Mich November 12 1860 She was twice married the second time to William Buel by whom she had five children John L Hall lived in Parma NY until the spring of 1833 when he came to Michigan and settled in Adrian which place he called home until the spring of 1840 Early in 1836 he went to Farm ington 11l remaining there nearly two years During the months of May and June 1836 he was engaged in running a ferry across the Mississippi river at Rock Island passengers being carried across in a skiff while horses wagons and all live stock were carried on a flat boat propelled by poles and oars In 1840 he was employed on the Michigan Southern railroad in its construction west of Adrian In the spring of 1841 he settled on section 14 in Medina which he located in 1833 where he has resided ever since At that time he owned eighty acres of new land without any improvements whatever He moved into a log house belonging to Amos Knapp residing there until he could erect a house of his own that summer He now owns 260 acres of land has erected a good brick house with capacious barns and all conveniences He has cleared 130 acres of land himself and has a good farm having done his share of all there has been to do in improving and developing the township January 28 1841 John L Hall married Clarissa C Crane daughter of Turner and Phebe Crane of Madison this county by whom he has had three children as follows Caroline born in Madison November 5 1S42 now the wife of James E Drown of Medina Harriet I born in Medina April 14 1849 now the wife of Lewis H Converse of Medina Phebe M born same place November 29 1858 Mrs Clarissa C Hall was born m New Hampshire December 13 1819 and came to Michigan with her parents in 1833 and settled in Madison Her father Turner Crane was born in Norton Bristol county Mass January 24 1789 and died in Madison this county July 23 1843 He married in 1812 Phebe Arnold daughter of Asa and Jemima Hodges Arnold by whom he had eleven children Mrs Hall being the fourth child Mrs Phebe Crane was born in Norton Mass November 10 1796 and died in Madison this county March 10 1868 Mrs Hall was married in January and the following March she moved with her husband into the woods where she has resided ever since having passed her life in assisting in building up and improving a new country but looks back with pleasure and pride when she thinks of the part she has taken and the number she has relieved during her life in Medina She knows what it is to be a pioneer wife. 
Hall, John L. (I32467)
 
11126 http://books.google.com/books?lr=&ei=3TacSI7wCZXAigGWxcT7BA&id=XR1WAAAAMAAJ&dq=Hoar+Pompey&q=Hoar+&pgis=1 Hoar, William (I33173)
 
11127 http://books.google.com/books?lr=&ei=EnPJR47hFqiWiQGupvwI&id=FMYMAAAAYAAJ&dq=%22John+Hoar%22+Alice&q=teresa&pgis=1 Hoar, David (I2343)
 
11128 http://books.google.com/books?lr=&ei=u2XIR-KbBoWQiQH96cyDBQ&id=sp9RAAAAMAAJ&dq=Hoar+born+Canada&q=124&pgis=1 Hawes, William (I28420)
 
11129 http://books.google.com/books?lr=&ei=u2XIR-KbBoWQiQH96cyDBQ&id=sp9RAAAAMAAJ&dq=Hoar+born+Canada&q=elijah+hoar&pgis=1

Death:
https://www.familysearch.org/search/recordDetails/show?uri=https://api.familysearch.org/records/pal:/MM9.1.r/9F81-SSG/p1 
Hoar, Elizabeth (I38233)
 
11130 http://books.google.com/books?output=text&id=wREVAAAAYAAJ&dq=%22Hosea+Foote%22&ots=QRpW6weyZf&q=Horr#v=snippet&q=Horr&f=false
MRS. CHARLOTTE L. WARREN.
The lady whose name graces this sketch represents, in her position as a citizen, two of the prominent pioneer families of the township of Serena, LaSalle county, Illinois. Her father, the late venerable John Wright, brought his family to LaSalle county some time in the '505, and her husband, the late Ruden Warren, was a son of that worthy citizen and guardian of the frontier, Daniel Warren, who came to this county from New York.
John Wright, the father of Mrs. Warren, was a native of Suffolk county, England, his birth having occurred at Ipswich in the year 1807. In his youth he had limited advantages for obtaining an education, but made the best of his opportunities and by close observation and general reading acquired a good store of useful information and became a useful citizen. After his conversion to Christianity he put away "worldly sins" and became an active and influential member of the Methodist Episcopal church, taking a prominent part in Sunday-school work. It was in 1849 that he came to America. He landed in Canada, his wife sick of cholera, and from Canada he came over into the United States, selecting a location in Vermont, where he made his home until 1855, farming, after working for a time at his trade in a blacksmith shop. In 1855, coming west to Illinois, he took up his residence in LaSalle county. Here he also engaged in farming and succeeded in providing his large family with all the necessities and comforts of life, though he never succeeded in accumulating property. He died in LaSalle county, in July, 1890: and his wife, wrhose maiden name was Rebecca. Os- born, died at the same place a few years later. Their children were: Hannah, wife of Thomas F. Farnsworth, of Silver City. New Mexico; Mary A., deceased wife of William Gillespie; Fannie, deceased; Lucy A., wife of John Townsend, of Ford county. Illinois: Maria, deceased wife of John Rogers; Charlotte L., whose name introduces this review; Fannie C. (2(1), who married John Rogers, of southeastern Kansas; Eleanor, deceased wife of Brice Dick; and Silas M., who was born in Vermont October 5, 1855, and is a successful farmer of Serena.
Mrs. Warren was born April 28, 1846, and August 13, 1862, was married to Ruden Warren, a native of Serena township, LaSalle county, Illinois, born December 31. 1840. They spent their married life on the farm where she still resides, and here their family was reared. Mr. Warren's youth was passed on his father's farm, and before he reached the age of twenty-two years lie enlisted in the service of his country as a member of Battery C, First Illinois Light Artillery, for a term of three years. His battery was in the department of the Tennessee and participated in some of the hard- fought battles of the civil war. When the battery was captured at Stone River Mr. Warren succeeded in making his escape. In the campaign around Chattanooga Mr. Warren was in poor health and was assigned to hospital guard duty. He was honorably discharged at Nashville at the close of the war, and returned home, shattered in health. Chronic disease contracted during the war was the cause of much suffering to him and no doubt shortened his days. He died in 1890. His life was spent as a farmer. He was progressive and successful and was ranked with the leading farmers of his locality. Politically he was an ardent Republican.
Mr. Warren's parents, Daniel and Lucy (Skeels) Warren, were the parents of the following named children: Elizabeth, widow of Anthony Horn Ardilla, deceased, was the wife of Henry Horr; Luther, deceased; Huron, of Lincoln, Nebraska; Ruden; and Lewis, a prominent farmer and worthy citizen of Serena township.
The children of Ruden Warren and wife are: Herman W., born April n, 1867; Myra E., October 8, 1876; and Silas H., September 28, 1882.
Mrs. Warren and her children are active members of the Methodist Episcopal church. 
Wright, Charlotte L. (I44840)
 
11131 http://books.google.com/books?pg=PA108&lpg=PA4&dq=%22Elias%20Hoard%22%20OR%20%22Hoard%20Elias%22&sig=qdrf3u70RdfOgxDbz6WBzqKsCTQ&ei=tGlUTJDkJ8H68AbhxJHgCA&ct=result&id=RfocAAAAYAAJ&ots=sDL6lbfYjx&output=text
Francis Triplett Hord had issue:
105. Mary Hord, born August 10, 1827.
106. Oscar B. Hord, born August 31, 1829; Attorney General of
Indiana, 1862-4.
107. William Taliaferro Hord, born March 3, 1832; Medical
Director U. S. Navy; died April i, 1901.
108. George Moss Hord, born August 24, 1833.
109. Francis Triplett Hord, born November 24, 1835; Attorney
General of Indiana, 1882-6. no. Elias Hord, born June 27, 1838. in. Kendal Moss Hord, born October 20, 1840; Shelbyville,
Indiana; Judge of Circuit Court, 1876-88.
112. Josephine Hord, born December 13, 1845.
113. Henry C. Hord. 
Hord, Francis Triplett (I36981)
 
11132 http://books.google.com/books?pg=PA1086&lpg=PA1215&dq=Hoard%20Wasioja&sig=kcVph3yThAM8sq8aarDZNzo5cAo&ei=ZQ8MTKvqBIKclgfwkf27Dg&ct=result&id=41FKAAAAYAAJ&ots=A099jfyov0&output=text
Lorenzo C. Hoard, liveryman and farmer, was born in Cattaraugus county, New York, in 1845, and is a brother of Emmett F. Hoard. Another brother, Ellis, died in Dodge county in 1870 at the age of seventeen. A sister, Lydia M., is now a resident of Minneapolis, Minnesota, and the wife of Edwin Hatch. Lorenzo C, the subject of this sketch, was a lad when his parents emigrated to Dodge county, with their goods drawn by an ox-team, and at the age of eighteen enlisted in Co. K, 2d Minn. Cav., and was in the northwest during the entire war, receiving his discharge in May, 1866. Returning to Dodge county he worked at the farm in summer and attended school in winter, till in 1870 he married Sarah E. Lunnell at Wasioja. In 1872 he moved to Dodge Center, and went into the butcher business with H. C. Sykes, continuing in the same for two years. Then he bought a farm in Wasioja and farmed until two years ago, when he took an interest with E. K. Whiting, his present partner, in the livery business. Two children have been born: Charlotte E., born in 1871, and Mattie R., born in 1875. In politics Mr. Hoard is a republican.


Groom's Name: Caleb Lorenzo Hoard
Groom's Birth Date:
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Bride's Name: Sarah E. Linnell
Bride's Birth Date:
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Marriage Date: 25 Sep 1870
Marriage Place: Wasioja, Dodge, Minnesota
Groom's Father's Name:
Groom's Mother's Name:
Bride's Father's Name:
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Groom's Race:
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Indexing Project (Batch) Number: M73467-2
System Origin: Minnesota-EASy
Source Film Number: 1316657
Reference Number: 208
Collection: Minnesota Marriages, 1849-1950

Cemetery:
http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GSln=hoard&GSbyrel=all&GSdyrel=all&GSst=25&GScntry=4&GSob=n&GSsr=41&GRid=43396716&df=all&
and...
http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=41632575 
Hoard, Lorenzo (I43062)
 
11133 http://books.google.com/books?pg=PA1528&dq=newport%20%22rhode%20island%22%20%22Paul%20family%22&ei=-4c8TO3DH4WBlAfJ26n4Ag&ct=result&id=GHIWAAAAYAAJ&output=text
(IV) William Peckham (3), son of William (2), born Sept. 3, 1706, lived at Middletown,. R. I., where he died April 12, 1784. On June 22, 1736, he married Phebe, born Nov. 14, 1717, died Nov. 10, 1757, daughter of James and Mary (Cook) Barker. Their children were: William, born Feb. 3, 1737, who died June 10, 1813; Elisha, born in 1738; Peleg, born in 1739; Mary, born in 1741; and Phebe, born in 1743, who married Nov. 8, 1767, Elisha Barker. 
Peckham, William (I48946)
 
11134 http://books.google.com/books?pg=PA190&dq=%22mary%20staples%22%20OR%20%22staples%2C%20Mary%22%20%2BHoar&ei=DkU-TMq8HcOqlAfb0Kn6BQ&ct=result&id=gvM_AAAAYAAJ&output=text
1290. VOLNEY A. HOARD. 11215.
Rochester, N. Y.
Physician. Born, Dundee, Yates Co., N. Y., July 28, 1859. Degree of M. D. from New York Homeopathic College. Was City Physician for five years. Member of Rochester Historical Society. Son of Gideon P. Hoard and Sarah Baker; grandson of Allan Hope and Emeline Baker; great-grandson of Edward Baker and Mollie Hills Sherman; gt'-grandson of Thomas Marshall Baker and Susanna Whipple, and of Moses Sherman and (wife not given) ; gt'-grandson of Marshall Baher and (wife not given), and of Ephraim Sherman.

Obituary:
http://archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com/th/read/NY-OLD-NEWS/2002-08/1030026155
HOARD - Dr. Volney A. HOARD entered into rest, Tuesday evening, November 7,
1922, at his home, No. 9 Arnold park. He is survived by his wife, Agnes E.
HOARD; one daughter, Mrs. William L. PLUMB; a son, Eric B. HOARD; his mother,
Mrs. G. P. HOARD, of Penn Yan and one brother, Harry S. HOARD, of Cambridge,
N. Y.
-Funeral services at the family residence, No. 9 Arnold park on Friday
afternoon, November 10th, at 3:15 o'clock. Kindly omit flowers. 
Hoard, Dr. Volney A. (I42918)
 
11135 http://books.google.com/books?pg=PA295&lpg=PA295&dq=%22nora%20Horr%22&sig=L3wrRS53AMxhiYws_sjDLHUnqQ4&ei=f7bRS-zFBoH88Ablu8G2Dw&ct=result&id=FdsBAAAAMAAJ&ots=VeHLVsueEi&output=text
CUMMINGS. Gilbert Horton, piano mfr.; b. Boston. Dec. 28, 1862; s. Albert and Mary (Kennard) Cummings; ed. pub. schs. and Rice Training Sch., Boston: m. Nora Horr. of Bristol, R.I., Feb. 23, 1892; 1 daughter. Levinta Horton. Connected with Importing house several yrs. ; became identified with Everett Piano Co.. mfrs. Everett pianos, 1884, and sec. treas. and dir. same since 1895. Republican. Unitarian. Recreations: outdoor life. Home: 19 Larehmont St., Dorchester. Mass. Office: Corner Albany and Wareham Sts., Boston.

Groom's Name: Gilbert H. Cummings
Groom's Birth Date:
Groom's Birthplace:
Groom's Age:
Bride's Name: Nora Horr
Bride's Birth Date:
Bride's Birthplace:
Bride's Age:
Marriage Date: 23 Feb 1892
Marriage Place: Boston, Massachusetts
Groom's Father's Name: Albert
Groom's Mother's Name: Mary
Bride's Father's Name: James L.
Bride's Mother's Name: Mary A.
Groom's Race:
Groom's Marital Status:
Groom's Previous Wife's Name:
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Indexing Project (Batch) Number: M01640-0
System Origin: Massachusetts-ODM
Source Film Number: 1651235
Reference Number:
Collection: Massachusetts Marriages, 1695-1910 
Cummings, Gilbert Horton (I50496)
 
11136 http://books.google.com/books?pg=PA338&lpg=PA338&dq=%22benjamin%20monk%22%20%2BLyon&sig=8ax-ED_DWz3wVbWO1YVyb59GyNw&ei=DxQ-S6GpEJPslAejwtWhBw&ct=result&id=wic3AAAAMAAJ&ots=d4YYeI2HZ7&output=text
24. III. 7. ELHANAN' LYON [Peter,' Peter1] was born in Dorchester, Mass., May 4, 1690, baptized 11, 5 mo., 1690 (D. Chh.) and died in Stoughton Oct . 30, 1745 (St). He married first, Feb. 19, 1712, Mary Rodman (D) and second Sept . 24, 1713, Meredith, daughter of Robert and Mary Wyatt . She died Aug. 11, 1731 (St).
Elhanan was reared in Stoughton, but m. both his wives in Dorchester. He inherited his father's assertive disposition and disinclination to yield submissively to the rights of the ministry of the day. Though both he and Meredith were received March 25, 1721-2 (c. chh.), by some he was called "ye great troubler of ye church," and in fine he was expelled therefrom in 1745 for controversy with the minister, the Reverend Mr. Morse. It is said that when Elhanan died shortly after, the reverend gentleman heaved a sigh of relief rather than of regret.
Administration on the estate of Elhanan Lyon, late of Stoughton, bricklayer, deceased, was granted to his son Enoch, July 1, 1746. Inventory by John Shepard, Moses GUI and Charles Wentworth, July 11, 1746. Real estate, ?266; total ?341? 14s.? 6d. 
Lyon, Elhanan (I48213)
 
11137 http://books.google.com/books?pg=PA338&lpg=PA338&dq=%22benjamin%20monk%22%20%2BLyon&sig=8ax-ED_DWz3wVbWO1YVyb59GyNw&ei=DxQ-S6GpEJPslAejwtWhBw&ct=result&id=wic3AAAAMAAJ&ots=d4YYeI2HZ7&output=text
48. IV. 24. ENOCH' LYON [Elhanan,' Peter,' Peter1] was born in Dorchester, Mass., March 11, 1716, and died in Weymouth in 1789. He married in Dedham, Dec. 31, 1738, Susannah Hoar. Like his brother Elhanan, Enoch presents for this record only one item from Probate Records: "Reuben Burrell was appointed April 13, 1789, administrator of the estate of Enoch Lyon, late of Weymouth, mason, deceased. Inventory presented May 5, 1789. Amt. ?25? 3s.? 9d." No names of widow or heirs.
Children of Enoch and Susannah (Hoar) Lyon, recorded in Stoughton:
100. I. Sarah, b. Oct. 17, 1738; d. Nov. 25, 1738 (St).
101. II. Meredlth, b. May 15, 1741; m. Oct. 9, 1760, Benjamin Monk (St).
102. III. Sarah, b. April 14. 1744; m. (?) Nov. 12, 1767, Samuel Paine (B). ,
103. IV. Enoch, b. June 19, 1846; d. Feb. 4, 1747-8 (St).
104. V. Hannah, b. Feb. 27, 1747-8. 
Lyon, Enoch (I7155)
 
11138 http://books.google.com/books?pg=PA409&lpg=PA409&dq=%22george+keyes+tufts%22+%22new+braintree%22&sig=gJ8IKMX3L9zXHGNKoCp1Z9i_5JI&ei=MB15UdLtEanM0gGPz4CgAQ&id=ulodAQAAIAAJ&ots=hFMEOnvi9E&output=text
George Keyes Tufts, son of Danforth Keyes Tufts, a farmer of New Braintree, Mass., and Hannah (Mathews) Tufts, was born October 17, 1841. His great-grandfather,Colonel Dan forth Keyes, served in the French and Indian and Revolutionary Wars. His father died when he was eleven years old.
His college preparation was obtained at a private school four miles from home, to and from which he walked daily, later at Williston Seminary, Easthampton, Mass., and after a year of illness, at the High School in Worcester, Mass. He was admitted to Amherst College, but was drawn to Yale by his classmates in school.
On account of ill health he left college the first term of Junior year, after receiving his Oration Appointment for Junior Exhibition, and returned for a short time in the Class of 1864, but in 1898 received the degree of Master of Arts with enrollment in 1863.
He taught for a time, and then went into business in New Braintree, conducting his own grocery store for nearly thirty-four years, until July, 1900. He was a director and secretary of the New Braintree Cheese Co. for twenty years.
He was actively interested in all local matters, was town clerk, member, and most of the time chairman of the New Braintree school committee forty years, postmaster thirtyfive years, selectman ten years, state representative in 1884 and 1890, state senator in 1902 and 1903, and library trustee. He was for many years chairman of the Republican town committee.
Long a deacon and clerk of the New Braintree Congregational Church, he was also director of the choir, chairman of the building committee of the new church, and one of the three donors of the organ. During the last twelve years he had lived much of the time in Worcester, where he was president of the Men's Union of the First (Old South) Congregational Church.
He was president of the Quaboag Historical Society, and vice-president of its committee having charge of the two hundred and fiftieth anniversary celebration of the founding of Brookfield and the publication of the official account of the same. He also gave the historical address at the one hundred and fiftieth anniversary of his native town, and had prepared two histories of the town, one of which is included in the History of Worcester County published by J. W. Lewis & Co. of Philadelphia.
Mr. Tufts died suddenly of apoplexy at his home in Worcester, in the early morning of February 11, 1913. He was apparently recovering from an attack of the grip, and the previous evening had been busy with his daughter preparing his annual report as town clerk. He was 71 years of age. The burial was in New Braintree.
He married, June 10, 1885, Annie Maria, daughter of Josiah and Sophina (Ingalls) Bush, of New Braintree. She survives him with their only daughter (B.A. Wellesley 1909). Mr. Tufts was a cousin of Rev. James Tufts (B.A. Yale 1838). 
Tufts, George Keyes (I67324)
 
11139 http://books.google.com/books?pg=PA501&lpg=PA491&dq=%22welcome%20converse%22%20Newell&sig=YNjyLSReUqrAB0gl5IRU9WsDuh4&ei=i1y7Sp7UFcaRlAf10MyxDQ&ct=result&id=dzpKAAAAMAAJ&ots=wrxpfZ26kz&output=text
"Charles Converse Brooks,' born in So. Decrfield, Mass., 26 Feb. 1874; was graduated from Polytechnic Institute, Worcester, Mass., in 189/;; is a mechanical engineer in the employ of John A. Mead & Co., Rutland, Vt., builders of conveyor machinery. Residence, Rutland, Vt. He married in Burlington, Vt., 22 Dec. 1897, Ida Mae Roleau, born in Williston, Vt., 23 March 1868, daughter of Duncan Alexander Roleau, born in Williston, Vt., 9 Aug. 1836. Her grandfather was Amos Roleaux, who was born in Marseilles, France, and came to New Orleans, La., after the fall of Napoleon, of whose bodyguard he had been one, with wife and family. The sons separated and went in different directions. Mrs. Ida Mae (Roleau) Brooks' grandfather went to Canada, and married there, his wife having come from Paris, where she was born, to live with an aunt in Canada. Mrs. Ida Mae (Roleau) Brook's mother was born in Colchester, Vt., 4 July 1842. Mrs. Brooks' grandfather, David Loren Sharpley, was born in Edinburgh, Scotland, Sept., 1811. His wife was Sophia Smith, born in Ireland in 1811." 
Brooks, Charles Converse (I393)
 
11140 http://books.google.com/books?pg=PA696&lpg=PA759&dq=%2BHoard%20montville&sig=4fWIZ1lCu9LUAaZkVh7Yf6NvER8&ei=Hj1QTNybG4eglAfX6LC7CQ&ct=result&id=PR9KAAAAMAAJ&ots=78JChXy5lz&output=text
SHADRACH DOTY, son Shadrach Doty, b. Whitehall, N. Y., Jan. 15, 1793; m. Avon. N. Y., May 2, 1813, Mary Kelcy, b. Oct. 16, 1794, dau. Alexander Kelcy. She d. Sweden, N. Y., Oct. 1, 1827 and was buried in ono coffin with her 3 infant children b. same day. He m., 2d, Sweden, Jan. 7, 1828. Jerusha Hoard, b. Stephentown, N. Y., Dec. 3, 1803, dau. George Hoard and Jerusha Leonard. She d. Winneconne, Wis., April 18, 1873. He m., 3d, there Mrs. Lovina Holt Hoskins, b. Canada. He d. Omro, Wis., Sept. 28, 1879; she lived theie, 1882.
At the death of his parents he was bound out to a distiller named Herman Norton, who lived in or near Avon, Livingston Co., N. Y. After marriage he lived successively Henrietta, Monroe Co., Stafford, Genesee Co., Swedrn. Monroe Co., N. Y., and then in Ohio and later Winnebago Co., Wis. He was member of Methodist Church and a consistent and devoted Christian for over sixty years.
Children, by 1st wife, b. Sweden:
10206. i. A boy, d. infancy.
10207. ii. Jitlia Almena, b. May 19, 1816; m. Lucius Clark; lives Grundy Centre, la.
10208. iii. Shaoeach Baldwin, b. Feb. 8, 1818; livee Butte des Morts, Wis.
10209. iv. Heney Mead, b. Sept. 21, 1819.
10210. v. Maey Maeia, b. June 17, 1821.
10211. vi. Hannah Kelcy, b. Feb. 21. 1823.
10212. vii. Alenandee Kelcy, b. Oct. 28, 1824; lives Berlin, Wis.
10213. vili. Oeein Augustus, b. Oct. 16, 1826; d. Winnebago Co., Wis., July 9, 1852.
10214. ix. A dau. i
10215. x. A dau. - b. and d. Oct. 1,1827; buried with their mother.
10216. xi. A dau.)
And by 2d wife:
10217. xii. A child, d. infancy.
10218. xiii. A child, d. aged 2.
10210. xiv. Adau.,m.: d. Silver City, Coi.
10220. xv. A dau., m.; d. Winneoonne, Wis.
10221. xvi. William W., b. Medina, O.. May 30, 1833.
10222. xvii. Geoeoe Ellioty, lives Good Thunder, Blue Earth Co., Minn. 
Doty, Shadrach (I41343)
 
11141 http://books.google.com/books?pg=PA759&lpg=PA759&dq=%2BHoard%20montville&sig=4fWIZ1lCu9LUAaZkVh7Yf6NvER8&ei=Hj1QTNybG4eglAfX6LC7CQ&ct=result&id=PR9KAAAAMAAJ&ots=78JChXy5lz&output=text
WILLIAM W. DOTY, sou Shadrach Doty and Jerusha Hoard, b. Medina, O., May 30, 1833: m. Vinland, Winnebago Co., Wis., Nov. 21, 1852, Helen A. Brown, b. Troy, N. Y., Nov. 7, 1834, dau. Harris Brown and Sarah A. Taggart. They live Millwood, Stearns Co., Minn. He enlisted Sept. 10, 1861, in Co. K., 11th Regt., Wis. Vols., and served till Nov. 18, 1864.
Children:
11252. 1. Ella A., b. Nov. 16, 1854; m. Nov. 5, 1876.
11253. ii. Geenells, b. Dec. 10, 1856; d. May 12, 1879.
11254. ili. Lun- V.. b. Sept, 16, 1860; m. Nov. 4, 1879.
11255. iv. Willie H., b. Feb. 20, 1866.
11256. v. Lonee., b. Oct. 16, 1869.
11257. vi. Eenest J., b. May 10,1871.
11258. vii. Maeel A., b. June 14, 1873.
11259. vili. Eveleen S., b. Juno 17, 1875. 
Doty, William Wilson (I54291)
 
11142 http://books.google.com/books?pg=PA76&lpg=PA77&dq=%22Abraham%20Bishop%20Smith%20%22&sig=HJhVyR0uP9kirfgRlnKt9eAxEhQ&ei=-56GSt3YH5yntgf0udznDA&ct=result&id=8SBWAAAAMAAJ&ots=9Ja06jW5We&output=text
No. 1 12.
ABRAHAM BISHOP,8 (Mehitable,5 Mehitable,4 Samuel,3 Samuel,9 Nicholas,1) b. Feb. 5, 1763, d. Apr. 28, 1844, ae. 80; Y. C. 1778; m. (1) NANCY, dau. of "Lord Timothy Dexter," of Newburyport, Mass. She became deranged and died; m. (2) BETSEY LAW, dau. of William Law, Esq.; she d. Sept n, 1817, ae. 39; m. (3) Mrs. ELIZABETH DEALL LYNDE, Jan. 3, 1819; no issue.
After he graduated from college, Mr. Bishop travelled in Europe, and after his return established a school; it is said " that he was quite in advance of his age as a teacher." He soon turned his thoughts and labors to politics, and became a leading political writer of bold, original views and of extensive influence. Pres. Jefferson appointed him Collector of the Port of New Haven, which he held until Pres. Gen. Jackson made a dean sweep of the offices in 1829. It was said on his return from Europe that " he was the best dressed and best looking man in New Haven."
By 1st m.:
I. Mary Ann B1suop,7 b. 1792, d, Aug. 26, 1845, ae. 62 ; m. Judge Nathaniel R. Clark, who came from Boston, and was Judge of Probate in New Haven for several years.

By 2nd m.:
(216) II. Caroline Bishop,t b. Nov. 29, 1804; m. Charles Nicoll. He was brother of Abraham Bishop's third wife, so by her marriage her step-mother became her sister !
HI. Betsey Law Bishop,t b. 1806, d. Apr. 9, 1822, ae. 16.
IV. Cornelia Bishop, 7 b. 1809, d. Apr. 24, 1834, ae. 25, m. Nathan Smith, Jr.
(a) Abraham Bishop Smith.*
(*) Rev. Cot neli1is Bishop Smith,' now Rector of St Stephen's Church, New York.
V. Samuel A. Bishop,t b. 1810, d. Sept 24, 1813, ae. 3.
VI. Stella Law Bishop,7 b. 1815, d. Apr. n, 1845, ae. 30, m.
PlERREFONT B. FOSTER. He d. 1386.
(a) William Law Foster.' He d. 1844, leaving one son, Pierrepont B. Foster,' x. 12 years (1891.) 
Bishop, Cornelia (I44265)
 
11143 http://books.google.com/books?pg=PA77&lpg=PA77&dq=%22job%20peirce%22%20%2Bhoar&sig=chyoMqwjvg8TGT3RzEnc7kmpm54&ei=7nl6S7WBL8ih8Aa9pMW2AQ&ct=result&id=Zrs-AAAAYAAJ&ots=cbu9pIRhxv&output=text
Philip Rounsevill emigrated to America from Honetun, in Devonshire County, England, about the year 1700, being then near 23 years of age. He was by trade a clothier or cloth dresser, but by practice a shrewd schemer ; and keen calculations and singular foresight enabled him to accumulate a larger property than that acquired by his neighbors. He not only had the faculty to get, but also to keep ; for he was patient, self-denying and exceedingly obstiuate, and 60 years of almost unprecedented success made him not a little purse-proud, arbitrary and overbearing. Such unlimited confidence did he repose in himself and such contempt for every body else, that his children, now advanced to the age of three score, were to his mind still in their nonage in the ability to manage property, and no division of his property or power would he make with any of them. They must wait till after his death, and all must keep upon their good behavior, or " King Philip " (as his neighbors nicknamed him) would cut them off with a shilling at last. William Rounsevill, eldest son of Philip, had died when his daughter Elizabeth was little more than five months old. When, therefore, Job Peirce became the husband of Elizabeth Rounsevill, it was expected that he would be extremely careful to humor all the whims of her austere grandfather, in the hope that his wife might be handsomely provided for in the Will of that man whose perverseness had ever kept his family under such long and degrading surveillance. The young wife is still at her grandfather's, and the old gentleman, who is evidently pleased with her husband, astonishes the neighbors by the liberality of his expenditure for the beautiful furniture he has procured as the outfit for the granddaughter. The day is set when the house-keeping of the youthful pair shall commence, and Job Peirce sends an old-fashioned, long bodied ox cart to take to their new house the first load of furniture. When the cart was loaded and ready to start, Philip Rounsevill thus addresses the young husband :? " The furniture upon this cart is mine, and I loan it to you for the use of your wife, my granddaughter." " Indeed," says the young man, with mock gravity, " indeed, you surprise me; now let me return your favor by surprising you equally as much. I am unwilling to borrow anything of you, nor will I; " and, suiting his action to the words, stepped to the forward end of the cart, and raised it till the tailbridge rested on the ground, then starting the team drove on till the last article of furniture had tumbled from the cart and lay scattered upon the ground ; then turning to his bride, he said; " Come, let us go home, I didn't borrow you." 
Rounsevill, Philip (I48510)
 
11144 http://books.google.com/books?q=Chautauqua+%22David+Preston%22+Whitney&btnG=Search+Books

Death info:
http://theusgenweb.org/oh/ashtabula/bios/BiosMI.htm
and
http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GET&db=:3284135&id=I8762 
Preston, Rev. David (I26778)
 
11145 http://books.google.com/books?q=horr&id=jWkZAQAAIAAJ&output=text&pg=PA127
William Taylor (1753-1829) entered the army as lieutenant 1776, rose to the rank of major of the 9th Virginia 1779 and was retired 1781. He was born in Orange Co., Va.; died in Louisville, Ky. 
Taylor, William Gibson (I21961)
 
11146 http://books.google.com/books?vid=OCLC03318541&id=M3XCFlk3sVMC&pg=PA130&vq=goodell&dq=%22Leonard+Hoar%22+%22New+York%22 Craft, Joseph (I24589)
 
11147 http://books.google.com/books?vid=OCLC35865737&id=nfhSZxL8bTEC&pg=PA104&lpg=PA104&dq=%22Leonard+Hoar%22 Morgan, Deacon David (I24591)
 
11148 http://books.google.com/books/about/Hon_Richard_Martin_Hoar_Hoar_Family_Maus.html?id=f_CJngEACAAJ
Hon. Richard Martin Hoar, Hoar Family Mausoleum, Dedication September 28, 1996: Ancestors and Family Descendants, Family Memorabilia and Photographs, Volumes 1-3
By: Frederic Walpole Hoar (Jr.)
Richard Martin Hoar was born 28 Mar 1831 in St. Austell, Cornwall, England to Jacob Hore and Gertrude Martin. He married Elizabeth Walpole Bailey 30 Aug 1858 in Toronto, Canada. She was born 3 Apr 1836 in Northern Walsham, England, the daughter of Samuel Jonas Bailey and Lady Mary Ann Walpole. Richard died 12 Feb 1903 in Houghton, Michigan. Elizabeth died 14 Nov 1929 in also in Houghton. Descendants have lived in Michigan, Arizona, California, New York, Texas and elsewhere in the United States. .

Obituary: http://www.mfhn.com/houghton/rosscoll/rossobits/rossobits-h.txt
Publication: Mining Gazette Date: November 14, 1929 Decedent: MRS. RICHARD M. HOAR Headline: MRS. RICHARD M. HOAR, PIONEER RESIDENT OF HOUGHTON, IS CALLED Death Comes Suddenly to Her Thursday Morning. Mrs. Richard M. Hoar, perhaps the oldest pioneer resident of Houghton, died at her home on Montezuma street at 8:30 yesterday morning. The mother of seven children, four survive her; Clarence M. Hoar of Houghton, with whom she made her home, Mrs. L. M. Hardenburgh of Ironwood, Mich, Mrs. Elton W. Walker, of Beverly Hills, California and Frederick W. Hoar of Globe, Arizona. They, and a brother, Samuel W. Bailey, of Manitowac, Wisconsin, rematin to cherish the memory of the most remarkable little woman who has ever entered their lives. Of the generation of pioneers of the Copper Country, which, like the Arabs, have folded their tents and silently stolen away, Mrs. Hoar Possessed all the sterling qualities of that generation. Vicissitudes were many in her long life, but she met them with courage, and the hope, born of faith, that the morrow would be better than today, and this faith sustained her as she quietly passed away. She was a familiar figure in the streets of Houghton, especially to those of the older residents, because up until a few days before her death, she did her own shopping. Independent of spirit and in the full possession of all her faculties, she maintained a keen interest of others and in the affairs of the day. If shadows were there, she did not live in the shadows, but in the sunlight of good cheer, and so, remained young, even at the advanced age of 93, exemplifying the thought that nobody grows old by merely living a number of years; that they grow old by deserting their ideals; that while years may wrinkle their skin, to give up enthusiasm, wrinkles the soul. And so she clung to her ideals; kept the embers of her enthusiasm alive and glowing. The late Mrs. Hoar was born in the town of North Walshan, Norfolk, England, April 3,1836, and coming to Canada in her twenty-second year, was married to Richard M. Hoar at Toronto on August 30, 1858. Mr. Hoar was for many years engaged in merchandising and was Houghton's leading merchant. The tales of hidden mineral wealth in the new Copper Country of Michigan, was the lure that brought the young couple to Houghton in the spirit of 1859. It is related that the trip from Toronto took 21 days. They landed at Portage Entry, where Mr. Hoard procured a small boat, and rowed...... (This is the end of the transcript which is available to me.) Transcribed by Kathleen Jackman-Hiltunen 
Bailey, Elizabeth (I24203)
 
11149 http://booth.ancestryregister.com/00004Booth_web/HORE00004.htm#c2967

Thomas Hoar and his wife Margery were named in deeds registered
in the Newenham Manor Court proceedings for 21 October 1512, 26
March 1534, 8 November 1536 and 19 April 1537 as lessees of
Newenham Abbey. Thomas Hore also held property from the Manor
of Axminster "three cottages with appurtenances and one meadow
called Barrysnmede and other desmesne lands called Long Cotehays
(all in the Tything of Axminster)" and "one tenement called
Wyllandes" and another tenement called Notplace and certain
desmesne lands and a close called Stritchenham (all in Tything
of Cleyhill)." ON the Lay Subsidy of 1525 he was assessed on
goods valued at 8 pounds (the equivalent of 12,000 pounds
today).[robby1940.FTW] 
Hore, Thomas (I17373)
 
11150 http://brooklyncentre.com/trees/familygroup.php?familyID=F10139&tree=Brainard

Birth:
http://ma-vitalrecords.org/MA/Bristol/Attleborough/Images/Attleborough_B253.shtml

Marriage:
http://ma-vitalrecords.org/MA/Bristol/Attleborough/Images/Attleborough_M462.shtml 
Sweet, Leander (I37588)
 

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