Encyclopedia of Connecticut biography, genealogical-memorial; representative citizens, v. 11, Part 63

Author: Hart, Samuel, 1845-1917. ed. cn; American Historical Society. cn
Publication date: 1917
Publisher: Boston, New York [etc.] The American historical society, incorporated
Number of Pages: 720


USA > Connecticut > Encyclopedia of Connecticut biography, genealogical-memorial; representative citizens, v. 11 > Part 63


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Dr. White was educated at Trinity School, New York City, and at the Central University. In 1910 he graduated from the University of California, with the de- gree of M. D. For one and one-half years following, Dr. White was with the Good Samaritan Hospital of New York City, and also spent six months at the Lying-In Hospital. Until 1913 he was located in Eddy county, New Mexico, where he practiced for two years, and in the latter year located in New Canaan, Connecticut. There he was successfully practicing until the World War, which brought its great demand for trained men in their profes- sions.


On August 1I, 1917, Dr. White was commissioned first lieutenant, Medical Reserve Corps, and was called to the army school at Washington, District of Colum- bia, where he remained about two weeks. From Hoboken, New Jersey, Dr. White sailed for England and was stationed at Blackpool, R. A. M. C. headquarters, for six weeks, where he took special training. Thence he went to Boulogne, France, and there he was brigaded with the 148th Field Hospital, and was senior officer in charge of that for a while. After the offensive was started, the hospital was broken up and the men were placed with battalions. Dr. White was with the 188th Brigade, 63rd Naval Division, until Au-


gust 27th, on which date he was knocked down by the concussion of a high explo- sive shell that caused three pulmonary hemorrhages and he was sent back to America, where he was discharged, Sep- tember 23, 1918. It was the spring of the following year before Dr. White at- tempted to resume his practice, which he has since continued in New Canaan. He is a member of the staff of the Stamford Hospital; also a member of the Stamford, Fairfield County and Connecticut Medical societies.


Outside of his professional work, Dr. White finds needed recreation in his hob- bies of farming and raising race horses. He is the owner of a farm in Newburgh, Orange county, New York. Among his horses are Princess Eva, a Chimes mare by Beau Ideal ; she has a mark of 2:231/2 ; also Lentala, by Walnut Hall, who has a mark of 2:0812; another mare is Mary Skinner, by Lacopia, by Bingen, and she has a mark of 2:0314, at three years old.


Dr. White's fraternal affiliations are as follows: Member of Tau Epsilon ; Alpha Sigma ; Harmony Lodge, Free and Ac- cepted Masons; Washington Chapter, Royal Arch Masons; Clinton Command- ery, Knights Templar, of Norwalk; La- fayette Consistory, and Pyramid Temple, Ancient Arabic Order Nobles of the Mystic Shrine, of Bridgeport ; Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks, of Nor- walk; and the Suburban Club of Stam- ford.


Dr. White married Olive F. McCready, daughter of Robert W. McCready, of Tuxedo, New York. The McCready line will be found in connection with the sketch of Mrs. White's brother, Dr. R. H. McCready, which appears in this volume. Dr. White and his wife are members of the Methodist Episcopal church of New Canaan.


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BORG, Henry L., A. B., Ph. G., Ph. D., State Chemist.


All lines of honest effort bear relative importance to the public welfare, but many a man has made his chosen work broadly significant for good by tireless energy, a capacity for exhaustive research and precise conclusions, and the practical application of his knowledge to everyday problems. In such a relation to the com- munity stands Henry L. Borg, of Stam- ford, Connecticut.


The name of Borg is of peculiarly in- teresting origin. In Sweden it is custom- ary to give certain surnames to men who have given military service. These sur- names are retained after leaving the army, and it is considered a great honor to be permitted to bear them. As an inher- itance handed down from father to son, they are borne proudly, showing as they do the military record of the family. The nam of Borg is of such derivation.


Dr. Borg's grandfather was a manufac- turer of piano wire, and had the reputa- tion of producing the finest bass strings on the market in his day. He was a man of more than local note in Sweden, and was interested in public progress as well as in the business in which he attained success. He controlled the local newspa- per, and was instrumental in forwarding the interests of his community, his fear- lessness and sound common sense giving him an influential position in the province. When the telephone was first introduced into Sweden he defrayed the expense from his personal means of erecting a tele- phone line from Stockholm in order that he might give his readers the latest news while it was still vitally fresh and im- portant in the great centers of population. He was one of the burgomasters of the town in which his family had been large land-owners for generations.


Of the next generation, Albert Borg, the present Dr. Borg's father, was born in the Province of Wwemmerberg, Swe- den. At the age of twelve years he came to America with his parents. The family settled in Altoona, Pennsylvania, where the young lad began his education in the public schools of the town. Mentally he was generously endowed, and his splendid inheritance of physical health carried him through the period of his education, when his studious tastes would have been very trying to one less robust. He was a great student of history, delighting in the great deeds of men of all times and all nations. Later his parents removed to Hartford, Connecticut, where he continued his edu- cation in the Hartford public high school. Later he studied law, but while he found great satisfaction in the knowledge thereby gained, he never practiced. The field of merchandising appealed to him more strongly, and here his training in broad and varied interests gave him an appreciable advantage. He became in- terested in a chain of grocery stores oper- ating in many Eastern cities, including Hartford, New Britain, and Bridgeport, having as an allied interest the importa- tion of high grade liquors. These stores were uniformly successful. He was associated with this company for about twenty years, then withdrew, but re- tained the Bridgeport interests, which he continued to operate until the time of his death. Like his father, he was public- spirited and a thoroughly progressive man, and was prominent in the Independ- ent Order of Odd Fellows.


His wife, Christine Borg, was a daugh- ter of Axel Johnson. They were the par- ents of ten children, among whom seven lived to mature years : Henry L., of whom we give more extended mention; Hilda, who married Harry Benedict, of Bridge- port ; Eva, Edith, Frederick, Sidney, and


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Ferris. The family are members of the Episcopal church.


Henry L. Borg was born in Bristol, Connecticut, June 13, 1882, and is the eldest son of Albert and Christine (John- son) Borg. He received his early edu- cation in the public schools of that town, but showed such capacity for diligent and precise work that his parents gave him opportunities broader than any to be found in a small town to prepare for a future of usefulness. When he was twelve years old he was sent abroad, and enjoyed a year and a half of study at Upsula, a school connected with the Uni- versity of Gottenberg. Later, when the family resided in Bridgeport, he attended school in that city, and was graduated from the Bridgeport public high school. For a year he attended Yale University, then entered the University of New York, from which he was graduated in 1900 with the degree of Bachelor of Arts. Through the formative years of his life, he showed great decision of character and steadfast- ness of purpose. So it was as a man, with his life work before him, that he entered Columbia University School of Pharmacy the following autumn. Here two years' work gave him the degree of Graduate Pharmacist, and in 1904 he received the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. His the- sis, "The Superphosphates," gave evi- dence of careful research.


The young man then took up post-grad- uate work in Bacteriology at the South- ern University, Baltimore, Maryland. This institution is a department of the Johns Hopkins University, world-famous in this branch of science. In this connec- tion, Mr. Borg also covered the regular medical course. This was not with the intention of practicing medicine, but to fit himself for every branch of chemical work, including autopsies.


With this broadly comprehensive pre- Conn-8-29


paration, he came to Stamford and estab- lished the Borg Laboratories. Here he keeps well abreast of the times, and has done much work of real significance. He now has nine men in his employ. Not long after this important beginning, he pur- chased a drug store, which has since been successfully conducted under the name of Borg Brothers. In April, 1919, The Borg Products Company was organized, with Dr. Borg as president and manager. This company manufactures a general line of baker's supplies, including shortening, extracts, flavors, etc. The company em- ploys `about thirty-five people. In this eminently practical way, Dr. Borg ap- plies the knowledge he has won through the years of study, giving, it need hardly be said, the most painstaking attention to every detail which will perfect the qual- ity of his products. The buildings are equipped with every modern device adapted to this line of production, and special attention is given to sanitation through every process of production. The buildings occupied are those formerly used by the Mianus Motor Works.


It was inevitable that a man of this calibre, with training which has made for such wide usefulness, should be called to public service. Dr. Borg has been State Chemist for some years. In 1916 he opened a laboratory in Bridgeport. The principal work done there is clinical, and five men are employed under his direction. Socially he has not been allowed to for- get his position in the public eye. He is a member of Phi Chi at Columbia ; Kappa Phi at Johns Hopkins; and the Alumni Association of both universities. He is a member of Union Lodge, No. 5, Ancient Free and Accepted Masons, of Stamford; Rittenhouse Chapter, Royal Arch Ma- sons; Washington Council, Royal and Select Masters; Clinton Commandery, Knights Templar, of South Norwalk;


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Lafayette Consistory, of Bridgeport ; Pyr- amid Temple, Nobles of the Mystic Shrine; the Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks, of Stamford; Excelsior Lodge, Knights of Pythias, of Stamford. He is also a member of the Stamford His- torical Society, and the Stamford Subur- ban Club and Yacht Club. In political affiliation, Dr. Borg is a Republican. He was chairman of the Stamford Board of Health for two years; was chairman of the Board of Finance for two years; and for two years was member of the Com- mon Council. In all his public life he exemplifies the same high ideals which have made his scientific work a success.


Dr. Borg married Julia Bjorklund, daughter of Charles A. Bjorklund, of Bridgeport, and they have one daughter, Margaret. The family are members of St. John's Episcopal Church of Stamford and actively interested in the social life of the church.


WEED, William Maury, Banker, Soldier. Public Official.


As banker, soldier, and man of affairs, Mr. Weed has been for many years much in the public eye, but has now withdrawn from the turmoil of the arena to lead the life of a country gentleman on his beau- tiful estate on the shore of Long Island Sound, his post office addrss being Noro- ton, Connecticut. Mr. Weed is a rep- resentative of one of the oldest Colonial families of the State of Connecticut.


The venerable home of this ancient race is still standing on the Boston Post Road in Darien, Connecticut. It is the old- styled structure of about two hundred years ago and was built to replace the first house built by Jonas Weed. which was destroyed by fire. The original chimney escaped the general demolition and the house now standing was built


around it, thus preserving it as the center of this dwelling.


Henry Davis Weed, born August 30, 1803, died February 1, 1875, grandfather of William Maury Weed, and a son of "Gentleman" John Weed, went to Savan- nah, Georgia, when a boy, making the greater part of the journey on foot, for that was long before the days of railroads, and at the time of his departure there was, probably, no vessel bound for the port to which he desired to go. In 1812,


in association with his brother, Nathaniel B. Weed, he established a hardware busi- ness in Savannah under the firm name of N. B. Weed & Company. This business, which is still carried on by descendants, is the oldest hardware concern in the United States. In the course of time Mr. Weed became the head of the firm, the name being changed to H. D. Weed & Company. In its beginning the business was retail, but its character was changed from time to time in conformity to vary- ing conditions and in order to improve new or larger opportunities. For some years the business was largely wholesale, reaching out into neighboring States and supplying the country stores. When the Civil War broke out there was no money in the South and Mr. Weed was not able to make his collections, it being custom- ary then for merchants to carry their patrons on their books until such time as crops were marketed. Mr. Weed ac- cepted cotton in payment of his accounts and stored it in a building in Savannah. When General Sherman's army entered the city the cotton was destroyed. It had always been Mr. Weed's custom to spend his summers in the family's old home town of Darien and he made no excep- tion during the war, for he ran the block- ade no fewer than eight times. He put in a claim against the United States Govern- ment for the cotton destroyed, and re-


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ceived in compensation the sum of ninety thousand dollars. With this money he built the brick Weed house, now standing in Noroton, Connecticut. Immediately after the return of peace, Mr. Weed as- sisted in the establishment of the Freed- men's Bank, but the Southern whites were not yet ready to support such an institu- tion and the venture had to be abandoned. In this unsuccessful undertaking Mr. Weed lost many thousands of dollars. The episode serves to indicate the fine spirit of the man and also his far-reaching business instinct, for his plans and pur- poses were essentially wise, failing merely because they were too far in advance of the time. .


Mr. Weed married Sarah M. Dunning, December 10, 1835, daughter of Shelden C. and Gertrude (Russel) Dunning, of Wilton, Connecticut, a representative of an old New England family. Gertrude (Russel) Dunning died August 16, 1865. The children of Henry Davis and Sarah M. (Dunning) Weed were: Joseph Dun- ning, mentioned below; Edwin G., Protes- tant Episcopal Bishop of Florida; and Gertrude, who died at the age of sixteen. The family were members of the Christian church, a denomination sometimes known as the Campbellites. The death of Henry D. Weed occurred February 1, 1875, in Savannah, Georgia. He was a man of much ability and great force of character, the architect of his own fortune and, to a certain extent, of the fortune of his de- scendants.


Joseph Dunning Weed, son of Henry D. and Sarah M. (Dunning) Weed, was born March 15, 1839, in Savannah, Georgia, and as he grew up was initiated in the business by his father. He spent his summers in Connecticut and his win- ters in the South, and in 1860 graduated at Harvard University. At the time of the Civil War he enlisted in the Georgia


Hussars, and his two brothers also served in the Confederate army, participating in some of the heaviest fighting. At the close of the war Mr. Weed's father took him into the business, to the leadership of which he succeeded upon the death of Mr. Weed, Sr. For many years Mr. Weed was president of the Savannah Bank and Trust Company, and also of the Middle Georgia & Atlantic Railroad Com- pany. He was the builder of this road, and served as president of the Augusta & Savannah Railroad Company. These two roads later became a part of the Cen- tral Railroad of Georgia, which eventu- ally passed into the hands of a receiver. The Augusta & Savannah railroad was earning good dividends, which during the reorganization were used to make up the deficit in the earnings of the other road. The bondholders of the Augusta & Sa- vannah railroad appealed to the courts for redress or relief and the courts ordered a president elected to represent the bond- holders of the Augusta & Savannah. Mr. Weed was honored by election to that office, which he held during the remainder of his life. The fact that he was the choice of the company furnished the most conclusive proof of the esteem and con- fidence in which he was held by all who knew him. For a long period he was chairman of the bond commission of the city of Savannah. His religious member- ship was in Christ Church, Savannah, in which for many years he held the office of warden.


Mr. Weed married, June 20, 1867, Sarah Fanny Maury, whose ancestral record is appended to this biography, and they be- came the parents of the following chil- dren : Gertrude, married Robert Billing- ton, of Savannah; William Maury, men- tioned below; Henry D., of Savannah ; and Josephine D., who married John Morris, of Savannah. Joseph Dunning


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Weed passed away February II, 1906. It is difficult, in this necessarily limited space, to do justice to the character of such a man, combining as it does the varied qualifications which fitted him to play the important part which was his at a time of unprecedented crisis in our na- tional history, embracing the Civil War and the momentous period which fol- lowed it. Essentially progressive, he pos- sessed, also, the ability to read the future and to discern what was necessary for the rebuilding and restoration of a land recently at war and reunited under condi- tions which had no place in its history. Few men of his time accomplished as much as he for the development of the New South in the State of Georgia.


William Maury Weed, son of James Dunning and Sarah Fanny (Maury) Weed, born May 12, 1870, in Savannah, Georgia, received his preparatory edu- cation at King's School in Stamford. In 1892 he graduated from Harvard Univer- sity, with the degree of Bachelor of Arts. For three years, thereafter, he pursued special studies abroad, spending one year at the Technische Hocher Schule of Han- over, and two years at the Koeniglische Bergakademie at Clausthel.


Upon his return to the United States, Mr. Weed entered the German banking house of Knauth, Nachod & Kuehne, of New York City, remaining there until the outbreak of the Spanish-American War. He was one of the first forty men to en- list in the navy, went to Santiago and served through the campaign under Ad- miral Sampson. After the war Mr. Weed spent about two years in travel, and then engaged in the steamship business. For four years he was in Havana as agent for the West India Steamship Company, going there on December 25, 1900. In 1906, Mr. Weed resigned his position, re- turned to his home in Noroton, Connecti-


cut, and engaged in the banking business in New York City. He also purchased, in 1911, a barren wilderness known as Brush Island, on the shore of Cove Pond. There is, perhaps, no more picturesque spot on the Connecticut shore and there is certainly none more beautiful, now that Mr. Weed has caused the brush to be cleared away and has developed the land into a fertile and, in all respects, a model farm. About fifty acres are under the plough and the estate is devoted to the raising of general crops and the breeding of beef cattle.


Politically, Mr. Weed is a Republican and a number of years ago was chosen by his party to serve on the Board of Finance of Darien, Connecticut. He retained the office ten or eleven years, with an inter- mission of two years. For the last four years he has been elected on the Demo- cratic ticket, a striking tribute to his non- partisan interest in community affairs.


While at Harvard, Mr. Weed became a member of the Institute of 1770, and also of the Hasty Pudding Club. He belongs to the Harvard Club, the University Club and the Georgia Society, all of New York. He is a life member of the Connecticut Harvard Club, and was one of the foun- ders of the Wee Burn Country Club, from which he resigned about two years ago. He is senior warden of St. Luke's Protec- tant Episcopal Church at Noroton.


Mr. Weed married, December 29, 1909, Julia Victoria Kaufmann, daughter of Bernard and Charlotte Wilhelmina (Von Hoffmann) Kaufmann, of New York City.


After an exceptionally varied and suc- cessful career as financier and business man, Mr. Weed has returned to the neigh- borhood of his ancestral home and to the quiet pursuits of rural life. In doing so he has taken with him the aggressive force and active public spirit always char-


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acteristic of his race and is causing them to be felt in the advancement of the in- terests vital to the welfare and progress of his home community.


(The Fontaine Line).


It seems clear that the name of the first authentic ancestor of the American branch of the Fontaine family was James, that being the English equivalent of the French Jacques, which is the name given in history. The fact that his son, grand- son, and great-grandson all bore the name of James seems to corroborate this theory. Jacques (or James) de la Fontaine, whose great-great-grandson, by the way, was also named James, was born in 1500, in the village of Chatelas, parish of St. Pierre, de Royan, Saintonge, and was a Huguenot pastor. In 1563 the religious persecution which was then raging in France found in him one of the martyrs of the Reformed faith.


(II) James (2), son of Jacques de la Fontaine.


(III) James (3), son of James (2) de la Fontaine.


(IV) James (4), son of James (3) de la Fontaine, was a minister of the Re- formed church.


(V) James (5), son of James (4) de la Fontaine, was also a Protestant min- ister.


(VI) Mary Ann, daughter of James (5) de la Fontaine, married Matthew Maury, of Virginia (see Maury line).


(The Maury Line).


Matthew Maury, the first ancestor of record, was of Huguenot descent and re- sided in Virginia. He married Mary Ann de la Fontaine (see Fontaine line).


(II) James, son of Matthew and Mary Ann (de la Fontaine) Maury, was rector of Fredericksville parish, Virginia.


(III) Matthew (2), the son of James Maury, was born in 1744.


(IV) James (2), son of Matthew (2) Maury, was appointed by President Washington consul at Liverpool, Eng- land, and until 1829, a period of forty years, filled that office continuously.


(V) William, son of James (2) Maury, was of Liverpool, England.


(VI) Sarah Fanny, daughter of Wil- liam Maury, became the wife of Joseph Dunning Weed, as stated above.


The Maury family is very prominent in the South and in England. One of its representatives, Matthew Fontaine Maury, was a distinguished hydrographer and a commander in the United States navy. Another Maury commanded the privateer "Georgia" during the Revolu- tion. Matthew Fontaine Maury charted the ocean, his charts being in use at the present day. In 1841 he was placed in charge of the Department of Charts and Instruments out of which grew the United States Naval Observatory and the Hydrographic Office.


WEED, James Albert,


Agriculturist.


WVide spaces give to the men of studi- ous tastes the untrammeled freedom impossible to be found in centers of popu- lation, where neighbor jostles neighbor and strangers congregate in more or less hilarious companies. In the peace and quiet and unmarred beauty of the country the occupation, the surroundings, and the home itself may be of a man's own choos- ing, and reflect his true character. It is here that a man may revel in the real- ities of life, which, after all, include those things least tangible, and leave outside -behind-the baubles for which too many give the best of life, only to learn their utter worthlessness. Richly endowed with those mental qualities which make a man himself, rather than the reflection


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of his fellows, James Albert Weed, of Stamford, Connecticut, enjoys to the full the privileges which the country life af- fords.


(II) Jonas (2) Weed, son of Jonas (I) Weed (q. v.), was administrator of his father's estate. While it appears that he remained in Stamford or thereabouts all his life, instead of following his father's example in penetrating new country, he lived an estimable life, doing his share in the public service, being townsman for eleven years. He died November 19, 1704. He married, November 16, 1670, Bethia Holly, daughter of John Holly; she died December 29, 1713.


(III) Jonas (3) Weed, son of Jonas (2) and Bethia (Holly) Weed, married January 20, 1703 or 1704, Sarah Water- bury, daughter of Jonathan Waterbury; she was born August 15, 1677. The meagre records of the generations which intervene between the immigrants and the time when the national prosperity was assured tell an eloquent tale of the bitter hardships endured with fortitude, and deeds of courage which there was no time or strength left to record.




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