USA > Massachusetts > Essex County > Biographical review, containing life sketches of leading citizens of Essex County, Massachusetts > Part 24
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on February 7, 1841, he accepted the charge of a grammar school at Lynn, Mass. On May 2, 1842, he was elected principal of the South Male Grammar School in Newburyport. His stay here was of short duration, as he was soon after transferred to the Brown High School, where he taught for about six years, displaying rare abilitics as an instructor. Then, his health having given way under the strain of his daily dutics and private studies, hc resigned his position in the high school, February 22, 1849, and made a voyage to the Pacific coast, making a short stay in South America. After an absence of two years he returned to Newburyport with his health fully restored. In the following fall he took charge of the English department of Chauncy Hall School, Boston, then as now one of the most successful private schools in the country.
During the nine years he passed here he qualified himself for the legal profession, and was admitted to practice in the courts of Mas- sachusetts, September 8, 1859, and in the United States District Court on the 17th of the following October. His admission to the Supreme Court was granted March 22, 1876. In 1860, resigning his position in Chauncy Hall School, he opened a law office in Boston, where he prosperously followed the profession until 1875. President Andrew Johnson appointed him Collector of Internal Revenuc for the Fifth District of Massachu- setts, and he filled that office continuously, under the succceding administrations of Grant, Hayes, Garfield, and Arthur, until August I, 1883. In 1875 the duties of the office were largely augmented by the consolidation with the Fifth District, of the Sixth, Seventh, and a part of the Fourth; and he abandoned his legal business. Throughout the fifteen years of his Collectorship, during which his collec- tions averaged one million dollars annually,
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the government did not lose a dollar through any shortcoming of his. Upon vacating the office his accounts. which were found entirely free from discrepancies, were promptly ad- justed, and left in such good order as to prove that he had been a model official. Resuming his profession soon after, he has since fol- lowed it in Newburyport, where he had re- tained his residence since 1839. He is inter- ested in the Merchants' National Bank, of which he is a director, and in the Institution for Savings, of which he is a trustee.
On September 1, 1842, Mr. Dame was united in matrimony with Frances A. Little, of Newbury, who bore him four children. These were: Frances Chase, born August 25, IS43, now deceased; Charles Little, born May 11, 1845, deceased; Frances Maria, born August 2, 1848; and Charles Wallis, born February 23, IS55.
Originally a Whig in politics, Mr. Dame has been a Republican since the formation of the latter party, and he has taken an active interest in national and State affairs. He had been a member of the Republican State Com- mittee for several years, when, complying with the order of President Hayes requiring Federal officials to keep free of party organi- zations, he resigned. In 1886 he was re- placed on the committee, which has had the advantage of his services since. After serv- ing Newburyport successively in its School Committee, Common Council, and Board of Aldermen, he was sent to the State Senate in 1868 by the Fourth Essex District. In 1886 he was elected Mayor of the city, and in the following year his administration of its affairs was characterized by a conservative policy and a studied regard for the hest inter- ests of the citizens. Desirous of promoting the welfare of Newburyport when out of office as well as when in office, he is a member of
several educational and charitable associations, has been a Water Commissioner since 1894, and is a director of the public library. He also belongs to the Veteran Artillery Com- pany, of Newburyport, and to the Ancient and Honorable Artillery Company, of Boston. Of the former organization he was the Com- mander in 1870, and he is now the Judge Ad- vocate.
Finally, he is prominent in the Masonic order, his connection with which furnishes a most creditable and interesting chapter of his life. He joined the fraternity in 1857, when he was received as a member of Revere Lodge, Boston. In the following year he was ad- mitted to St. Andrew's Royal Arch Chapter and the Boston Commandery of Knights Tem- plar and in 1859 to the Boston Council of Royal and Select Masters. Three years after in Raymond Lodge of Perfection at Lowell, Mass., he received the Ineffable Degrees and was admitted to the Council of Princes of Jerusalem, to Mount Calvary Chapter of Rose Croix, and to the Massachusetts Consistory. Next year, on May 22, he was made honorary member of the Supreme Council of Sovereign Grand Inspectors-general of the Thirty-third Degree, an honor to which his services in be- half of Masonry well entitled him. He was introduced and crowned an active member ad vitam, September 23, 1897, of the Supreme Council for the State and District of Massa- chusetts, and is now Deputy for the State of Massachusetts.
He was Worshipful Master of Revere Lodge in 1860 and 1861. After filling subordinate offices in St. Andrew's Chapter, he was Scribe in 1859, King in 1860, and High Priest in 1861 and 1862. Also in 1862 he was ele- vated to the dignity of Grand King of the Grand Royal Arch Chapter of Massachusetts. Having received orders of Knighthood in the
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Boston Commandery of Knights Templar in 1858, he was the Eminent Commander in 1866 and 1867. He was Commander of Hugh de Payens Commandery of Knights Templar at Melrose, Mass., while that organization was conducted under a dispensation, and he has been retained on its roll as an honorary member since then. He is now an honorary member of all the Masonic bodies in Newbury- port, including lodge, chapter, and command- ery. In 1867 a new lodge established in Georgetown, Mass., was named the Charles C. Dame Lodge in his honor. He was the Illus- trious Commander in the Boston Consistory of the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite in the years 1863, 1864, and 1865; was Deputy Grand Master in the Grand Lodge of Massa- chusetts in 1862, 1863, and 1864; and was elected Grand Master of Massachusetts Masons in 1865, 1866, and 1867. By a unanimous vote in 1881 he was elected to the Board of Directors of the Grand Lodge of Massachusetts for two years, and he has been regularly re- elected since. On December 10, 1884, when the Masonic Education and Charity Trust was established, Mr. Dame was elected a trustee thereof for the term of seven years, reckoning from the first day of that year; and when the Board of Trustees organized he was chosen secretary, an office which he has held up to the present time. He has also served on im- portant special committees of the Grand Lodge. The superintendence of the erection of the Masonic Temple in Boston, at the corner of Tremont and Boylston Streets, fell to his lot while he was Grand Master of the Masons of Massachusetts. Undertaken after a business depression that had lasted two years, this was a herculean task; but it was accomplished, thanks chiefly to the tireless efforts of Grand Master Dame, assisted by Right Worshipful Sereno D. Nickerson; and
the building was duly dedicated in 1867, in the presence of President Andrew Johnson, distinguished Masons from different States, and an immense concourse of Massachusetts brethren. The occasion was one of exultation to Mr. Dame, and was only of less importance to the Grand Lodge than the day of 1873, when its entire debt was wiped out.
A LBERT E. COGSWELL, a retired resident of Essex, Mass., was born at the Cogswell homestead in this town, September 23, 1852, son of Albert and Elizabeth (Edwards) Cogswell. He is a lineal descendant in the eighth generation of John Cogswell, who was born in 1592 in Westbury Leigh, Wilts County, England, son of Edward and Alice Cogswell and grandson of Robert Cogswell. An earlier member of the family in England was Lord Humphrey Cogswell, who received a coat of arms in 1447.
On September 10, 1615, John Cogswell married Elizabeth, daughter of the Rev. Will- iam and Phillis Thompson; and in May, 1635, he with his family sailed for America on board the "Angel Gabriel," commanded by Captain Andrews. The ship, which was wrecked on the coast of Maine in .August, 1635, brought other passengers, who settled in Essex; and among them were John and Thomas Burnham, ancestors of the Burnham family of this town. John Cogswell settled in Essex, and engaged in the manufacture of woollen cloth. He owned three hundred and seventy-five acres of land; and the family homestead, where eight generations have re- sided, is a part of his original tract. He died November 29, 1669; and his wife died June 2, 1676. Their children were as follows: a daughter who married in England and lived in
ALBERT E. COGSWELL.
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London; Mary, who in 1649 married Godfrey Armitage; William, who was born in England in 1619; John, born in 1622; Hannah, who in 1652 married Deacon Waldo; Abigail, who married Thomas Clark; Edward, born in 1629; Sarah, who married Simeon Tuttle, and died in 1692; and Elizabeth, who on July 31, 1657, wedded Nathaniel Masterson.
William Cogswell, son of John and the next in line, was united in marriage in 1649 with Susannah Hawkes, who was born in Charles- town, Mass., in 1633, daughter of Adam and Anna (Hutchinson) Hawkes. William Cogs- well died December 15, 1700, a few years after the death of his wife. They were the parents of ten children, namely: Elizabeth, born in 1650; Hester; Susannah and Ann, twins, born January 5, 1657; William, born December 4, 1659; Jonathan, born April 26, 1661; John, born May 12, 1665; Adam, born January 12, 1667; Sarah, born February 3, 1668; and Edmund, who died young.
Lieutenant John Cogswell, son of William, married Hannah Goodhue, who was born in Ipswich, Mass., July 4, 1673, daughter of William, Jr., and Hannah (Dane) Goodhue. The following children were the fruit of this union : Hannah, born March 27, 1693; Will- iam, born September 24, 1694; Susannah, born March 10, 1696; John, born December 2, 1699; Franeis, born March 26, 1701 ; Elizabeth, who married Colonel Joseph Blaney, October 20, 1717; Margaret, born March 1, 1722; Nathaniel, born January 19, 1707; Joseph, who died in 1728; and Bethiah, who was married January 15, 1730. Lieuten- ant John Cogswell died in 1710; and his wife was again married in 1713 to Thomas Perley. She died December 25, 1742.
William Cogswell, son of Lieutenant John, was born in Chebaeco Parish, Ipswich, and during the active period of his life was here
engaged in agricultural pursuits. The family residence was built by him in 1732. On Sep- tember 24, 1719, he wedded Mary Cogswell, who was born in 1699, daughter of Captain and Elizabeth (Wainwright) Cogswell. She died at the homestead in Essex, June 16, 1734. On March 13, 1735, he married for his second wife Mrs. Elizabeth Wade Apple- ton, widow of Benjamin Appleton, Esq. William Cogswell died July 19, 1762. He was the father of sixteen children. Those by his first union were as follows: Elizabeth, born June 13, 1720; John, born February 23, 1722; Mary, born September 15, 1723; Jona- than, born May 9, 1725; Jacob, born May 18, 1727; Luey, born June 28, 1728; Sarah, born February 5, 1729; William, born in May, 1731; and Sarah, born March 3, 1733. His children by his second union were: Hannah, baptized in December, 1735; Hannah, second, baptized June 7, 1737; William, second, born March 5, 1740; Susannah, born April 19, 1741; Samuel, born March 15, 1742; Susan- nah, second, born July 9, 1743; and William, third, born May 31, 1745. Deacon Jonathan Cogswell, great-grandfather of the subject of this sketch, was married on March 16, 1748, to Mary Appleton, who was born March 25, 1729, daughter of Benjamin and Elizabeth (Wade) Appleton, of Ipswich. Deacon Jona- than died February 11, 1812, and his wife died June 30, 1813. Their children were: Nehemiah, born in 1749; William, born Au- gust 26, 1750; Jonathan, born January 4, 1754; Elizabeth, born June 7, 1756; Joseph, born December 20, 1757; Benjamin, born June 27, 1759; Mary, born December 19, 1760; Hannah, born August 12, 1762; Ben- jamin, second, born October 17, 1764; Benjamin, third, born August 15, 1766; Na- thaniel, born May 17, 1768; Sarah, born Jan- uary 13, 1770; Aaron, born December 28,
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1771 ; and another child, who was born Octo- ber 12, 1773, and died in infancy.
Aaron Cogswell, grandfather of Albert E., was an industrious and successful farmer. He married Lucy Kinsman, who was born Octo- bcr 14, 1781. They rcared four children, namely: Aaron, born February 21, 1807; Albert, born October 9, 1810; Lucy, born July 17, 1813; and Jonathan, born March 5, 1820. Aaron Cogswell died July 20, 1847.
Albert Cogswell, his sccond son and the father of Albert E., was one of the able farmers and prominent residents of this town, widely known and sincerely respected. His energetic and prosperous life ended July 3, 1885. His wife, Elizabeth Edwards, whom he wedded December 26, 1849, was born in Wenham, Mass., June 11, 1820, daughter of Benjamin and Susan (Roberts) Edwards. She became the mother of two sons: Albert E., the subject of this sketch; and Aaron, born July 20, 1858. Aaron Cogswell has been a prosperous farmer and a successful provision dcaler in Esscx, and is now living here in re- tirement. He is an active Republican, and is now serving as secretary and treasurer of the Republican Town Committee. He is a Past Chancellor of Starr King Lodge, No. 81, Knights of Pythias, of this town; is a mem- ber of J. T. Hurd Lodge, F. & A. M., of Ipswich ; of Ocean Lodge, No. 91, I. O. O. F .; and Cape Ann Encampment, No. 33, of Gloucester, Mass. On July 20, 1886, Aaron Cogswell married Emma Dade, born in this town, June 28, 1864, daughter of Sylvester and Mary Jane Dade, the former of whom is a gardener and fruit-grower of Essex. Mrs. Albert Cogswell died January 2, 1897.
Albert E. Cogswell began his education in the common schools, and completed his studies with a business course at the Boston Commer- cial College. He has always resided at the
family homestead in Essex, and previous to his retirement was an exceedingly active farmer.
On January 1, 1890, Mr. Cogswell was joined in marriage with Sally A. Wright, who was born in Marshfield, Mass., December 25, 1852, daughter of Ezra and Sally (Holmes) Wright, of Plymouth, Mass. Ezra Wright was born April 4, 1824; and his wife, Sally, was born in February of the same year. She died February 23, 1858, leaving four children, namely: Ruth B., now wife of Richard A. Windsor, telegraph operator at Duxbury, Mass .; Josephine, now widow of Henry W. Swift, late of Plymouth, Mass .; Sallie A., who is now Mrs. Albert E. Cogswell; and Emma, wife of Philip Adams, a railroad en- gineer of Newburyport, Mass. Ezra Wright's second wife was Rebecca S. Phillips, born March 13, 1836, daughter of James and Martha (Perkins) Phillips, the former of whom was a manufacturer of musical instru- ments in Boston, and the latter a native of Lancaster, N. H. James Phillips died in 1878, and his wife died in January, 1870. By his second union Ezra Wright had one son, Ezra, who was born December 13, 1862, and married Emma Cole, of Kingston, Mass.
Politically, Mr. Cogswell is an active sup- porter of the Republican party. He is a member of Starr King Lodge, Knights of Pythias, and is both prominent and popular among the leading residents of Essex.
ENO A. APPLETON, of Rockport, an insurance broker, Justice of the Peace, and Notary Public, is a na- tive of Ipswich, Mass., born January 22, 1824. A son of Captain Oliver and Anstice (Cogs- well) Appleton, both of whom were born in Ipswich, he comes of an old Ipswich family
AARON COGSWELL.
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that traces its genealogy to Little Wadding- field, England. The founders of the Apple- ton family in this country were three brothers, who came from said English town and settled in Ipswich. These ancestors owned a large tract of land lying between and along the Ipswich and Miles Rivers, and which included a portion of the estates now owned and occu- pied by the wealthy New York Appletons, together with the fine residence and mill site of C. J. Norwood, Esq., on Ipswich River. Remarkable instances of longevity in the fam- ily were Zeno A. Appleton's father and grand- father, who respectively attained the ages of ninety and ninety-three years, and his grand- mother, who was one of twelve sisters named Patch, and who was ninety - nine years old when she died. Captain Appleton, who ob- tained his military title in the local cavalry, spent his life in Ipswich and Hamilton, chiefly occupied in agriculture.
Zeno A. Appleton lived in Ipswich until he was ten or twelve years of age. Then he removed with his parents to Hamilton, where the rest of his minority was passed on his father's farm. He obtained his education by attending the public schools of Ipswich and Hamilton, and spending a few terms at the Hampton Falls Academy in New Hampshire and the Gorham Academy in Maine. Soon after, he began teaching in the town of Ips- wich. Subsequently he taught in Hamilton, Essex, and Wenham for periods covering about ten years in all. He also spent portions of several years in shoemaking; and later he carried on a general mercantile business at Hamilton, where he was living at the outbreak of the Rebellion. In the fall of 1862 he enlisted in the Putnam Blues of Charlestown ; but after a short time he was transferred, to enable him to engage in the recruiting service in Rockport and other towns. After several
months spent in that occupation he was trans- ferred to the Third Company of Massachusetts Heavy Artillery Volunteers, which was first assigned to the forts in Boston Harbor. Af- terward it was engaged in fort duty in the vicinity of Washington, where it was in 1864, when Mr. Appleton was honorably discharged. Having entered the army as a private, he re- ceived a commission as Second Lieutenant from War Governor Andrew, when he joined the Heavy Artillery; and, after he left the recruiting branch of the service in the latter part of 1863, Governor Andrew commissioned him as First Lieutenant. After returning to civil life he settled in Rockport, and for a time was a clerk in the Rockport Savings Bank. While holding that position he ac- quired an interest in the insurance business, which finally became so large that he was able to resign his position in the bank and devote his time exclusively to insurance. He writes both fire and life insurance policies, and rep- resents in both lines some sixteen of the lead- ing companies. For twenty-five years he has been a Justice of the Peace and for a number of years a Notary Public. He is a Republi- can in politics and a member of the First Congregational Church of Rockport. He was first married to Adeline A. Choate, of Rock- port, whose only daughter by him is now de- ceased. A second marriage united him with Mrs. Eliza G. Henderson, of this place. Their home, pleasantly situated on High Street, is one of the finest in Rockport.
ALPH ORIGEN BAILEY, one of the prosperous business men of Ames- bury, was born here, June 24, 1849, son of Orlando Sargent and Mary (Gove) Bay - ley. The family is traced back to the early settlement of the county, and tradition tells
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of a pedigree traced from the time of William the Conqueror. The ancient coat of arms which hangs in Mr. Bailey's hall, bears the following inscription : "The most noble Rob- . ert Baily, Duke of Rossteven, Marquis and Earl of Lindsay, and Baron of Bresby, L. great chamberlain of England and one of ye P. C., so created July 26, 1353, in ye 7th of Edd ye 2ยช. This antient and noble family is descended from Leopold Baily, who was constable of Dover Castle in the time of King Ethelred and owner o a town in Kent now called Bersted, but having quarrelled with ye monks of Canterby, his oldest son was killed therein, whereupon he solicited Swene, King of Denmark, to invade ye realm, and was assisting therein. Besieged Canterby and took the archbishop prisoner, and ye death of his son was avenged in ye year 1014."
John Bayley was one of the first settlers in Salisbury, Mass. He came from Chelten- ham, or, as some say, Chippenham, a place about twenty miles from Bristol, England, embarking with his son John, Jr., in May, 1635, on the "Angel Gabriel," a vessel of two hundred and forty tons. An interesting account of the voyage of this and the sister ship "James," which brought Richard Mather, ancestor of all the New England Mathers, and many other settlers, has been published. The "Angel Gabriel" anchored at Pemaquid, Me., was entirely destroyed by a great storm in August, and cattle and goods and several sea- men on board were lost. Owing to this ter- rible experience John Bailey never recrossed the ocean, and his wife and daughters and a son Robert died in England. John, Jr., born in 1613, settled in Newbury in 1650. He was one of the party who opposed the Rev. Mr. Parker for arbitrary conduct. He mar- ried Eleanor Emery, sister of John Emery and of Ann Emery, who married James Ord-
way, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. John Bayley, Jr., had eleven children. Their son Joseph, born in 1648, removed in 1700 to Arundel, Me., near Bristol. He was killed by the Indians in October, 1723, at the age of seventy-five years. Joseph Bayley married Priscilla Put- nam, daughter of Captain John and Rebecca (Prince) Putnam, of Salem Village. John Bayley, the third of the ten children of Joseph and Priscilla, was born September 16, 1678. His first wife was Mary Bartlett; his sec- ond, a widow, Sarah Giddings.
Captain William, son of John and Sarah Bayley, was born in 1719. He married Anna Lowell, who died in 1774, at the age of fifty years. He died August 23, 1788, at the age of sixty-eight years. His wife was a daugh- ter of Gideon Lowell. Their children were: Daniel; James; Sarah, who married Elijah Clough; Hannah Lowell, who married Daniel Currier; Ann or Abigail, who married Amos Atkinson; Betsy, who married Daniel Wor- then; and Mary, who married Captain John Blaisdell, of Amesbury.
James Bayley, the second son of Captain William, born September 30, 1746 (old style), married Abigail, daughter of Deacon Orlando Sargent. They had ten children, namely : John, who died at the age of twenty-five; Jon- athan, who married a Miss Stevens, and died in his twenty-seventh year; Sally, who mar- ried Captain Stephen Webster; James, who went to sea and died at Surinam, May 24, 1796; William, grandfather of Ralph O., born March 20, 1779; Betsey Sargent, who died January 1, 1801 ; Orlando Sargent, born De- cember 22, 1784, who married Betsey Lowell, grand-daughter of Captain Abner Lowell, and died in 1817; Daniel, who died at sea Decem- ber 5, 1805; Charles Worthen, born Febru- ary 17, 1790; and Moses, born in 1792, who married Susan Leach. Charles Worthen Bay-
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ley went to sea, was impressed, and served on board a British ship of war for some time. In consequence of the efforts made by his brother William, who in ISIo went to Halifax for that purpose; he was released, and came home after an absence of many years. He afterward went to sea again, and was never heard from. Mrs. Abigail Sargent Bayley died June 20, 1800. On September 14, 1801, James Bayley married a second wife, Dorcas Bartlett, daughter of Francis and grand- daughter of John Bartlett. By this union he had another son, James, born in 1804.
William Bayley, the grandfather, married July 19, 1801, Anna, only daughter of Adams and Anna Morrill. She died July 2, 1802. He married for his second wife, December 19, 1805, Elizabeth Ordway, who was born June 5, 1779, and died March 2, 1862. William Bayley owned the property now held by the Catholic Society, and upon the present site of the St. Joseph's Church the old Bailey house used to stand. He was one of the prosperous merchants of his day. He died June 2, 1857. By his first wife he had a daughter, Anna, who in' 1828 married William J. Boardman, and died a year or two later; and by his second wife he had four children - Betsey, Abigail, Hannah Ordway, and Orlando Sargent.
Betsey Bayley, the eldest of these, born November 7, 1806, became on July 3, 1832, the second wife of William J. Boardman, son of Joseph and Anna Boardman. His grandfather was Nathaniel Boardman, of Salisbury, Mass. William J. was for many years prominent in town and church affairs, being connected with the Main Street Congregational Church of Amesbury. He died twenty or more years ago. His children by his wife Betsey were: Joseph, now a Congregational minister in Barnet, Vt .; Anne Morrill, deceased; Eliza- beth, who died aged four years; and three
others who died in infancy. Abigail Bayley, born July 16, 1808, married August 8, 1831, Daniel Currier Bagley, son of William and Sarah (Worthen) Bagley. The children of Daniel C. and Abigail Bagley were: Edward Stimpson, deceased; Abby, who married the Rev. Rufus King, now pastor of a church in Cairo, N. Y .; and Ella Maria, who married Edward A. Childs, a leading dry-goods mer- chant of Amesbury at the present time. Hannah Ordway, born March 25, 1813, now residing in Toronto, Canada, married the Rev. Harrison O. Howland, a Congregational or Presbyterian minister, who died in Kinder- hook, N. Y., about 1870. Their children were: Elizabeth Phyfe, who married James T. Harris, now living in Missouri; William Bayley, born June 10, 1849; Mary, who died in childhood; Abby Bagley, now assistant principal of Demill College in Toronto, Can- ada; and Ellen Maria, residing in Toronto, Canada. William Bayley Howland, founder of the Outing magazine, formerly owner and. publisher of the Cambridge (Mass. ) Tribune, is now manager and treasurer of the Outlook, New York. His residence is Montclair, N. J.
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