USA > Massachusetts > Worcester County > Historic homes and institutions and genealogical and personal memoirs of Worcester county, Massachusetts, with a history of Worcester society of antiquity, Vol. II > Part 36
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(V) Jonathan Cogswell, son of William Cogs- well (4), was born at Chebacco, May 9, 1725, died February II, 1812. He married, March 16, 1748, Mary Appleton, born March 25. 1729, died June 30, 1813, daughter of Benjamin and Elizabeth ( Wade ) Appleton. They resided until his death in the Cogswell home, built in 1732. He was dea- con of the church at Chebacco thirty-two years.
Children : Nehemiah, born 1749; William, born August 26, 1750. see forward: Jonathan, born Janu- ary 4. 1754: Elizabeth, born June 7, 1756: Joseph, born December 20, 1757; Benjamin, born June 27, 1759: Mary, born December 19, 1760, died August 22, 1784; married, June 24, 1784, David Choate, father of Rufus Choate by his second wife; Han- nah, born August 12, 1762; Benjamin, born Oc- tober 17, 1764. died young; Benjamin, born August 15, 1766; Nathaniel, born May 17, 1768; Sarah, born January 13, 1770: Aaron, born December 28, 1771; child, born October 12, 1773.
(VI) William Cogswell, son of Jonathan Cogs- well (5), was born in Chebacco, August 26, 1750. He married, August 18, 17SI, Jemima Haskell, of Gloucester. She was born July 7. 1755. They set- tled in 1790 in Lunenburg, Massachusetts, where he died April 24, 1806; she died July 16, 1838. Their children: Sarah, born August 19, 1782, died August 10, 1817: Mary, born October 27, 1784: William, born September 4. 1786; Francis, born February 21, 1788; Clarissa, born February 24, 1789: Jonathan, born May 13, 1792; Hannah. born April 13, 1795; Seth, born February 21, 1798, see forward; Eliza- beth, born April 11, ISO1.
(VII) Seth Cogswell, son of William Cogswell (6), was born in Lunenburg, Massachusetts, Feb- ruary 21, 1798, died March 27, 1877. He was edu- cated there in the public schools. He followed farming for his occupation, buying a place in Leo- minster when a young man. He also followed the trades of shoemaking and carpentering to some ex- tent. He joined the Methodist Episcopal church upon attaining his majority, and was a faithful member the remainder of his life. He was made a lay preacher and was active in the duties of that office. He was a Republican in politics after that party was organized. He was a highway surveyor in Leominster some vers.
He married. October 10. 1832, Eliza Dalrymple, born October 31, 1806, daughter of James and Azu- bah Dalrymple, of Framingham, Massachusetts. Their children: Francis R., born December 1, 1833, conducts a sugar refinery in New Orleans, Louisi- ana: married, September 12, 1876, Emma Mitchoff ; James D., born October 26, 1835. married, Novem- ber, 1881, Francelia Lombard, of Westminster, Massachusetts, and has one son: Annie Parmenter, born December 16, 1838. died March 12, 1841 ; Ange- line E. born February 1. 1842, resides in Leomin- ster: George W., horn March 29. 1844. see for- ward: Martha C., born March 2, 1848, resides in Leominster.
(VIII) George W. Cogswell, son of Seth Cogs- well (;). was born in Leominster, Massachusetts, March 20. 1844. He was educated in the public schools and learned the carpenter's trade, which he followed for several years. In 1873 he settled in
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Shrewsbury, where he devoted himself to farm- ing and the wheelwright's business, purchasing the property and business of Mrs. Whitney, after death of Mr. Whitney. For more than thirty years he has been prominently identified with both the busi- ness and agricultural interests of the town. He is active in public affairs, having served the town some six years on the board of assessors. He is a Republican in politics. He is an active member of the Shrewsbury Historical Society, of which he was the treasurer from 1902 until the present time ( 1906). He is a member of Ridgley Lodge No. 112, Odd Fellows. He is prominent in the Methodist Episcopal church, of which he has been trustee since 1886, treasurer of board of trustees since 1891, and treasurer since 1883 of its Sunday school.
He married ( first) Elizabeth G. Henshaw, born December 24. 1845, daughter of Alvin and Cynthia ( Sawyer ) Henshaw, of Shrewsbury. He married ( second ), July 20, 1899, Sarah M. Wheelock, born March 29, 1851, daughter of Luke M. and Roxanna ( Bartlett ) Wheelock. of Shrewsbury. His only child was: Walter Alvin, born Septemher 5, 1873. died December 15, 1875. aged two years, three months. ten days.
ADDISON MACULLAR. Horace Macullar, father of Addison Macullar, settled in Rutland, Massachusetts, where his parents and other mem- bers of the family had lived. He bought a farm in Barre, May 15, 1812, of Silas Partridge, of Tolland, Connecticut, and Phebe Partridge, of Barre. The family came to Worcester county early in the eigh- teenth century. Margaret McCullo married John Parlin, of Concord, April 2, 1745. She was living then with the McCullo or Macullar family at Rut- land, Massachusetts. Horace Macullar married Jane Kelley, October 14, 1814. She died May II, 1840. Their children, all born at Barre were: Mary Jane. born October 19. 1815: Lyman Brooks, born August 30, 1819, lived in Worcester, using the name of Lyman Brooks, dropping Macullar; Joel Addi- son, born December 19, 1822, generally known as Addison Macullar, the name he used in business ; Susan Kelley, born May 31, 1825; Martha A., born September 1, 1829; Eliza R., born March 23, 1832; Horace Henry, born December 7, 1834, died March 14, 1836; Charlotte Auguste, born April 11, 1837.
Addison Macullar, son of Horace Macullar, was born in Barre, Massachusetts, December 19, 1822. He was brought up in Barre and learned the printer's trade in the office of the old Barre Ga- cette. He went to Worcester and worked for a time for the firm of Luther & Freeland, clothiers, and then returned to Barre, where he and John Felton, who had been a compositor also in the Gazette office, opened a retail clothing store in Barre. His next venture was in Worcester, where with George B. Williams, formerly with Luther & Freeland, and Dr. Moules, brother-in-law of Mr. Macullar, he started the firm of Macullar, Williams & Co. Dr. Moules was a silent partner. At first Mr. Williams retained his position as clerk in a Boston clothing store, acting at the same time as buyer for the Worcester store. Charles W. Parker, who subsequently became a member of the firm, was a fellow clerk of Mr. Macullar in Worcester. The original firm of A. Macullar & Co. was or- ganized in May, 1849, and two years later the name became as stated above, Macullar, Williams & Co. and the Boston store was opened in 1852 for the manufacture and sale of clothing at wholesale at Nos. 35 and 37 Ann street, now North street. The Worcester business was continued, but the Boston
house soon became the important part of the busi- ness.
In 1854 the Boston store was removed to 47 Milk street and in 1857 the firm occupied the old Washington Coffee house, then 158 Washington street and located just south of Milk street. in 1860 the store formerly occupied by George W. Warren & Co. at 192 Washington street was leased and the firm name became Macullar, Williams & Parker. Since 1864 they have been at the present location. 400 Washington street, Boston. The origi- nal building was erected for them by the trustees of the Sears estate. (Sve Sears Family in this work). The building was burned in the great Bos- ton fire, November 9, 1872. The building was re- built and the firm removed from their temporary quarters at 33 Washington street to the new build- ing in April, 1874. The original partners were in business together in perfect harmony for more than twenty-five years. Before the death of Mr. Macullar several other partners had been taken into the firm : Nathan D. Robinson, Ira B. Fenton, James L. Wes- son and Hatherly Foster. The retail department has been run since 1857, begun as an experiment when they dared not extend credit and could not find customers able to pay cash. Aided by liberal advertising the experiment was a success from the first, and the firm won the reputation that it has since held as manufacturers of superior goods and developed an enormous retail trade.
Mr. Macullar lived in Boston from 1855 to 1870, and twenty-eight years in the present home in Wor- cester. The Worcester business became his prop- erty and was run by his son, Frank R. Macullar, under the name of Macullar & Son at 372 Main street. Older residents of Worcester will recall the advertising of the Macullar firm on account of its rhymes in which local hits abounded. Follow- ing are some examples :
Let poets sing of sylvan grots, And flowery groves. and rural cots. I'll praise the vests, and pants and coats Of Great Macullar. *
Yes. pants he has of every hue, The pure jet black and the black and blue, And every style that's fresh and new,
And handsomer by far. Than those you buy at slop-shop stalls. And large supplies of overalls, With suits throughout for parties, Balls At the new Bazaar.
Macullar, Williams & Co. stores, No. 2 Piper Block, 271 Main street and the old stand 172 Main street, January 16, 1851.
After the death of the original partners the business of Macullar & Son was consolidated with that of Parker, established in 1847 by Samuel Parker. The incorporators of the new firm of Macullar, Son & Parker Co., organized in 1900 with a capital of $8.000 were: Herbert S. Parker, Will- iam J. Schmidt and the Macullar heirs. The pres- ent officers are Herbert S. Parker, president and treasurer. Mr. Schmidt was one of the employees in the Macullar shop. The concern is now located at 425 Main street.
Addison Macullar married Martha M. Reed, a native of New Hampshire, daughter of Cheney Reed. Their children were: Charles A .. born April 29, 1855, died January 16, 1873; Frank R .. born April 3, 1857, married Emma J. B. Burbank; he died August 13. 1900; she resides at 30 William street, Worcester, and has one daughter, Margaret B., born July 18, 1890. Mrs. Addison Macullar re- sides in the old home at 805 Main street. Cheney Reed, father of Mrs. Addison Macullar, was born in
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1789 in Oakham, a son of Silas Reed, who married Elinor Hunter, of Oakham. . He was born in Eng- land. Cheney Reed was a farmer and merchant and later in life a druggist. He was a soldier in the civil war. He married Hannah Langmade, of Chi- chester, New Hampshire, and was the father of nine children, all born in New Hampshire: Curtis, Sally Ellinor, died young: Sally, Ellinor, Andres, Elizabeth, Martha, Mary, John L.
HENRY MARTIN HAYWARD. William Hayward (I), the immigrant ancestor of Henry Martin Hayward, deceased, late of Winchendon, Massachusetts, was born in England or Ireland. Thomas Hayward, of Duxbury and Bridgewater, with whom he seems to have been connected was from Aylesford, England. There is a tradition in the family that the early ancestors came from Den- mark and settled in Ireland. There is another tra- dition also to the effect that the founders of this family in America were, when children, induced to go aboard ship just before sailing and were brought to this country and bound out to a farmer to pay their passage. In all likelihood, however, the name and family is English although it may have origi- nated in England with the conquest of the Danes. The name is spelled Hawared, Haywood, Heywood, Heyward, Haiward and in fact as many ways as human ingenuity can devise, and there is no more difficult name to trace through the maze of bad spelling and numerous individuals of the same name in the same towns.
William Hayward was first of Charlestown, Massachusetts, in 1637. He was of age when the colony was settled and a proprietor in the year men- tioned. He removed to Braintree, whence perhaps the tradition that the first comers settled in Ded- ham, which is a neighboring town. One John Hay- ward who lived in Dedham died without having sons to perpetuate his name. William was deputy to the general court in 1641 from Braintree. He signed his own name William Haywood, as witness to a deed of William Everill in 1654. He was drowned May 10, 1659, when probably about forty- five years of age, and when most of his children were minors. Administration was granted June 14, 1659, to his widow Margery for herself and children. She died July 18. 1676. The administra- tion of her estate was granted August 1, 1676, to her son Jonathan. The names of their children as far as known were: Samuel, first of the name to locate in Mendon where his brother-in-law, Ferd- inando Thayer, located. (He bought a house lot April 6, 1672, and later acquired five hundred to one thousand acres. His descendants in Mendon and Milford, formerly part of Mendon, have been very numerous. Ballou believes that he came from Swansea as well as his brother William and Jona- than, whom Ballou thinks a younger brother, but who was son of William.) William. see forward. Jonathan, married, May 6, 1663, Sarah Thayer, of Braintree; he settled in Braintree and had a large family there; he may have owned land also at Men- don: he may even have lived there for some time, but his permanent home was in Braintree. Huldah, married. February 14, 1652. Ferdinando Thayer, the progenitor of the Thayers of Mendon and all Wor- cester county. Perhaps other branches of the Hay- ward family are from this family.
(II) William Hayward, younger son of William Hayward (1), was born in Braintree or vicinity about 1750. Her father was drowned in 1659, and he seems to have gone to live with relatives at Bridgewater and Duxbury, where several branches of the Hayward family were living, but the exact
relationship seems impossible to determine. Will- iam first appears on the public records at Swansea, near Duxbury, 1672, the same year that William married Sarah and their children are all recorded at Swansea. William appears to have had land at Mendon as well as his brothers, and his sons Jonathan, Samuel and William settled there or in the vicinity, but he may have lived at Swan- sea all his life. Apparently the author of the Mil- ford history believes he settled about the time that his son Jonathan came to Mendon. He calls Jona- than a brother of Samuel and William. He had brothers of that name, but the two first settlers were his father William and uncle Samuel. Chil- dren of William and Sarah Hayward, born at Swansea, were: Jonathan, born April 8, 1672, see forward; Margery, named for her grandmother, Margery (Thayer) Hayward; Sarah, born March 2, 1675-76, named for her mother; Mercy, born June 9, 1678; William, born January 30, 1680-81, named for father and grandfather; Samuel, named for uncle; Huldah, born March 13, 1685, named for aunt who married the Thayer progenitor of Men- don; Oliver, born March 17, 1687; Hannah, born March II, 1689.
(III) Jonathan Hayward, eldest son of William Hayward (2), was born in Swansea, Massachu- setts, April 8, 1672. He came to Mendon when under age and lived with his uncle, Samuel Hay- ward. He fell in love with a Mendon girl, in spite of her name, Trial Rockwood, daughter of the first John Rockwood, of Mendon. She was born in 1676-77. From the fact that their eldest child ap- pears on the Swansea records it is presumed that Jonathan took his bride to Cape Cod for a few years. He returned to Mendon and before 1710 located his home northeast of Bear hill, near Great meadow, and became a large landowner. He had several hundred acres from the Sherborn road south along Beaver street beyond the junction with Mount Pleasant street. He married (second) Grace about 1705. Children of Jonathan and Trial Hayward were: Sarah, born December 17. 1694. at Swansea; William, born January 30, 1696-97, sce forward; Jonathan, Jr., born April 8, 1699, married January 22, 1717, Lydia Albee, set- tled in Mendon; David, born July 8, 1701, at Men- don. Children of Jonathan and Grace, all born at Mendon, were: Joseph, born May 15, 1706; John, born February 4. 1709, married, March 6, 1728-29; Samuel, born March 11, 1716; Trial. born April 25, 1717, married John Hayward. April 3, 1740; Sarah, born April 25, 1718; Elizabeth.
(IV) William Hayward, son of Jonathan Hay- ward (3), was born at Mendon, Massachusetts, January 30, 1696-97, died in Westmoreland, now Surrey, New Hampshire, August 10, 1768. He mar- ried Joanna - born in Mendon, probably 1686, died in Westmoreland, November 2, 1767. Their gravestones may be seen in the old burying ground in the southern part of Surrey, New Hampshire. Children of William and Joanna Hayward were: Martha, Joanna, married Benjamin Carter, the pio- neer of the name in Surry; Rachel. Daniel, William, Peter, see forward.
(V) Peter Hayward, son of William Hayward (4), was born in Mendon, Massachusetts, in 1725. He was the first settler in Westmoreland, New Hampshire, removing from Mendon about 1752, to the part now Surry, New Hampshire. The mother came on horseback, carrying three little ones, one in her lap and two in baskets hung on each side of the horse. Peter Hayward established his home in the wilderness and built his house which is still in good repair, 1881. In 1755, during the Indian
P. M. Hayward.
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outbreaks in the French and Indian war, he was obliged to hurry his family to the fort at Keene for protection against Indians. He went with the company in pursuit of a band that had killed one woman at the very gate of the fort. Hle was one of the incorporators of Gilsum, New Hampshire, March 2, 1769. He served in the revolution with his son Silvanus. It is related that Peter Hay- ward went to the battle of Bunker Hill wearing a leather apron and taking his dog with him, and that after the ammunition failed he was a con- spicuous figure in charging bayonets, still accom- panied with the dog. He died in Surry, New Hamp- shire, August I, 1791.
He married (first) Ruth Rutter, of Mendon, Massachusetts, who died in Surry, October 10, 1761. He married (second), June 2, 1762, Esther Holmes, of Ashiford or Mansfield. Connecticut. She died in Surry. May 28, 1782. He married (third), May 6, 1783. Mrs. Hannah Fay. Children of Peter and Ruth Hayward Peter, Deborah, married Nathaniel Dart; Huldah, married Jonathan Smith ; Rachel, married Jonathan Carpenter : Silvanus, see forward; William, married Lucy Russell. Chil- dren of Peter and Esther Hayward were: Ruth, married Benjamin Carpenter, Jr .; Molly, married Moses Field : Calvin, married Lucinda Field ; Elias, married Lena Smith: Esther, married Solomon Mack.
(VI) Silvanus Hayward, son of Peter Hay- ward (5), was born in Westmoreland, New Hamp- shire, now Surry. May 16, 1757. He bought the west half of the eleventh lot, sixth range, for thirty-eight pounds in April, 1791. It was then a thick dark swamp and people laughed at his folly in selecting such a homestead. He afterward bought a strip from the lot west of his, so that he owned all the village south of Dr. Webster's. He built a log house in 1791. Fourteen years later he built another and better one. Having a taste for study he managed to fit himself for college, and he entered Dartmouth in 1780. He was in college with the notorious Stephen Burroughs. In his junior year he found it impossible to continue for want of funds, his father being able to assist him but little. He received a certificate from President Wheelock written on parchment. valued under the circumstances as much as a diploma. He married soon afterward and settled in Surry, where he lived for eight or nine years, when he removed to a lot of sixty acres in the northwest part of Gilsum. He remained there only a year, sold out and returned to Surry, but returned again to Gilsum the next year and lived on his old place while clearing what is now the village.
Having both a theoretical and practical acquaint- ance with the art of surveying, he was extensively employed in that profession. He was a noted school master, teaching for many winters after he came to Gilsum. He also taught singing school and played the hass viol in the church choir many years. He served the town frequently as moderator and was selectman three years. He was a ready speaker and often conducted religious meetings. In 1795 he built a saw mill and in 1806 began to burn brick on his place. He was a soldier in the revolution in Colonel Ashley's regiment (seventh company), marching to the relief of Ticonderoga in June, 1777.
He married (first), April 1, 1783, Olive Metcalf, born at Wrentham, Massachusetts, December 10, 1756, daughter of John and Abigail (Fisher) Met- calf. She died July 19, 1799. He married (second), February 19, 1781, Lucinda Lee Champlin, born at Lyme, Connecticut, April 13, 1769. died Septem- ber 2, 1808. He married (third). August 10, 1810,
Mary Webb, of Rockingham, Vermont. He died October 1, 1817. Children of Silvanus and Olive Hayward were: Claudius Drusus, born at Frank- lin, November 15, 1783, died at Saratoga, New York, March 20, 1839; married Sally Redding and had nine children. Clarissa Harlow, born at Surry, March 17, 1786, died at Dublin, May 2, 1811; mar- ried, April 29, 1807, Levi Willard and they had two children. Horace, born Surry, May 2, 1787. died at Wooster, Ohio, August 3, 1869; married ( first) Lydia White and had six children; married ( second ) Abigail Weed and had one son. Am- herst, born in Surry, November 18, 1788, see for- ward. Julia Harcourt, born March 21, 1790, died March 23, 1816. Olive Metcalf, born in Surry, July 19, 1791, died at Newton, Massachusetts, October 30, 1858; married, March 12, 1812, Levi Willard and had five children. Emily, born at Surry, Septem- ber 9, 1792, died February 22, 1813. Rachel, born December 10, 1794, died 1830; married Courtenay Brigham and had one child. Huldah, born Febru- ary 25, 1798. died September 3, 1859; married Thomas Simpkins and had six children. Theron. horn July 12, 1799, died May 7. 1875; married ( first), December 6. 1827, Calista Webster and had five children; married (second ). December, 1864, Ann W. Farman. William, born May 21, 1802, married Hannah Davis. Harriet, born August I, 1804, died December 30, 1875; married Daniel Deets and had four children. George Champlin, born December 20, 1806, married, June 29, 1834, Esther Patten Wilkins and had six children.
( VII) Amherst Hayward, son of Silvanus Hay- ward (6), was born at Surry, New Hampshire, November 18. 1788. When about four years old he removed with his parents to Gilsum, New Hamp- shire. He was brought up by Colonel Jonathan Smith, who married his father's sister. He received a good education in the district schools of Gilsum. After his marriage in 1811 he went to live with Colonel Smith in Rockingham, Vermont .. but in December, 1815, returned to Gilsum to live. He was with his father the first year. then just above the village. This was the famous cold season when frosts came every month in the year and food was scarce. He managed to procure what was necessary to buy for his family by peeling and selling birch brooms at nine pence apiece. The spring after his father's death he settled on the homestead and lived there the remainder of his life following farni- ing and by great industry and careful management he acquired a comfortable competence. He was a man of sound judgment and good character, ara earnest advocate of temperance and was the first man in town to raise a huilding without providing liquor for his neighbors who came to help. He. was a decided anti-slavery man and a public speaker . of considerable ability. He was gifted like his father with musical ability; he led the choir and played the bass viol in church for forty years. He was a deacon of the Congregational church for twenty years. Ile built a saw mill in 1820 and a shoe shop in 1835 for A. W. Kingsbury. He was active in town affairs and served as constahle nine years, school committee in 1822 and selectman one year. He died January 16, 1867.
He married (first). February 24, 1811, Betsey Cole, born in Orange, Massachusetts. September II, 1792. died August 9, 1820, daughter of John and Polly (Bemis) Cole. He married (second), June 20, 1821, Polly Cole, born in Gardner, Massachu- setts, August 28, 1800, died November 21, 1826. She was a sister of his first wife. He married (third), December 18. 1827, Sarah Fish, who died August 16, 1883. Children of Amherst and Betsey
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(Cole) Hayward were: Jonathan Smith, born in Rockingham, Vermont, December 11, 18II, died March 4, 1813. Louisa, born in Rockingham, Ver- mont. August 27, 1813, died August 10, 1815. Am- herst, born October 23, 1815, died December 17, 1815. Nahum Osgood, born September 8, 1817, mar- ried, February 21, 1841, Hannah Glover and they had four children-Mary Elizabeth, George Nahum, Caroline Elizabeth, Theron. Olive Metcalf, still living (1906), born July 22, 1819, married, April 4, 1839, Jeremiah Abbott and they have four children -Ellen Jane, George, Frank, Lizzie Emma. Chil- dren of Amherst and Polly Hayward were: Julia Ann, born May 23, 1822, died July 25, 1866; mar- ried Aaron D. Damm and had one child-Damon. Henry Martin, born November 1, 1823, see forward. Cludius Buchanan, born February 23, 1825, still liv- ing (1906) ; married May Louisa Dart and had five children-Olive Mary, Edith Theodo, Dan Ambrose, Julia Antoinette, Elbridge Thurston, Harry Mar- tin. Children of Amherst and Sarah Hayward were: Mary Elizabeth, born November 1, 1826, died May 2, 1827. Silvanus, born December 3, 1828, married No- vember 23, 1853, Harriet Elvira Eaton, born April 6, 1829, a descendant of Francis Eaton, who came in the "Mayflower"; they had five children-Arthur Jameson, Belle, Grace, Paul, John Stark. Ebenezer, born November 15, 1830, died November 15, 1830. Clarissa, born August 20, 1831, died August 20, 1831, Betsey, born August 3, 1833, died April 2, 835. Sarah Jane, born October 23, 1835. Emily Graham. born February 8, 1838, died April 16, 1866. Esther White, born December 6, 1841, married, March 5. 1866.
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