USA > Maine > Piscataquis County > Biographical review : containing life sketches of leading citizens of Somerset, Piscataquis, Hancock, Washington, and Aroostook counties, Maine > Part 37
USA > Maine > Aroostook County > Biographical review : containing life sketches of leading citizens of Somerset, Piscataquis, Hancock, Washington, and Aroostook counties, Maine > Part 37
USA > Maine > Hancock County > Biographical review : containing life sketches of leading citizens of Somerset, Piscataquis, Hancock, Washington, and Aroostook counties, Maine > Part 37
USA > Maine > Washington County > Biographical review : containing life sketches of leading citizens of Somerset, Piscataquis, Hancock, Washington, and Aroostook counties, Maine > Part 37
USA > Maine > Somerset County > Biographical review : containing life sketches of leading citizens of Somerset, Piscataquis, Hancock, Washington, and Aroostook counties, Maine > Part 37
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Anson J. Robinson has resided in Dover since he was ten years old. He completed his education at the Foxcroft Academy. In 1862 he enlisted in Company I, Twenty-sec- ond Regiment, Maine Volunteers, Captain A. C. Lambert, and afterward served in the Civil War, on the Lower Mississippi, until his term expired. On January 1, 1864, he re-en- listed in Company C, First Maine Cavalry, which took part in the battles of Cold Harbor, the Wilderness, Spottsylvania, and other en - gagements. He was taken prisoner on June 24 of the same year, and was confined in Libby Prison and Lynchburg for a time. From the latter place he was compelled to walk to Dan- ville, a distance of seventy-five miles, without food, finally reaching Andersonville Prison. After a time he was exchanged at Savannah,
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and subsequently rejoined his regiment. He was honorably discharged from the service in 1865. After his return to civil life he en- gaged in farming. Since 1882 he has occu- pied his present farm, near the village, con- taining one hundred and seventy-five acres. The property is situated on elevated ground, overlooking the Piscataquis valley, and is well adapted to general farming. Besides carrying on the latter, Mr. Robinson attends a paying milk route, and keeps an average of twenty cows.
In 1878 Mr. Robinson was united in mar- riage with Eliza Atkinson, a daughter of Tim- othy and Arminda Atkinson. Mrs. Robinson is the mother of seven children; namely, Fred A., John H., Ada H., Ida M., Helen E., Marion A., and Melissa F. Mr. Robin- son is a member of C. S. Doughty Post, of Dover, and of the Patrons of Husbandry in South Dover, Grange No. 261.
SAIAH YOUNG, a venerable and well- to-do farmer of Lamoine, Hancock County, was born here, December 13, 1810, when the town was called Trenton. He comes of Massachusetts ancestry, his grand- father, Elknah Young, having been born and reared on Cape Cod. In common with the companions of his boyhood Elknah Young was brought up to a seafaring life, and subse- quently obtained his livelihood by fishing. Accompanied by a sister, he came to Hancock County in the latter part of the last century, and for a time continued his chosen occupa-
tion at Eden, Mount Desert. In 1800 he re- moved to Trenton, and, taking up new land, cleared a small farm, on which he spent his remaining years, dying in 1832. He served in the Revolutionary War, and is said to have shared in the celebrated Boston Tea Party. His second wife, Mary Lewis Young, was the mother of Solomon Young, the father of Isaiah Young.
Solomon Young, born in 1786 at Eden, came from there to Trenton, now Lamoine, when fourteen years old. He assisted in the pioneer labor of improving the land, and de- voted the larger part of his time to farming and lumbering. At his death, in 1849, he was sixty-three years old. With his wife, Sarah, who was a daughter of James Lord, of Surry, he reared eleven children; namely, Samuel, Isaiah, Isabel, Leonard, William, Leroy A., Emma J., Clarinda, Amanda, Nel- son, and Wilson. William, whose biography will be found elsewhere in this work, married Sarah Berry, and has two children - Nahum and Adele.
Isaiah Young obtained his early education in the little red school-house, where each winter he ran the risk of freezing or asphyxia- tion by smoke. Then, learning the trade of a ship-builder, he made that his chief occupa- tion for forty consecutive years, remaining in Lamoine all the time. In 1837 he bought the farm on which he is now living, and which at that time was in its primitive wild- ness. In connection with his other work he devoted a part of his time to clearing the land, laboring with such success that he has
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now a large part of it in cultivation. In 1840, with bricks made by himself, he built a house, the only one of that material in the town; and since then he has had the bricks clapboarded over. Besides replacing the original barn by a large and conveniently ar- ranged structure, he has made many other substantial improvements. Fishing, at which he was very successful, was also one of his means of obtaining a livelihood.
Mr. Young cast his first Presidential vote in 1832 for Andrew Jackson, but since the formation of the Republican party he has been one of its strongest adherents. Having been quite active in local affairs, he served for several terms as Selectman and Road Sur- veyor. He was married in 1836 to Eunice, daughter of Nathaniel and Elizabeth (Springer) McFarland, of Trenton. Of his three chil- dren, a daughter and a son died in infancy. Rachel M., his surviving child, married Ed- mund Hodgkins, of Lamoine, and has two children - Rufus and Etta. Rufus Hodgkins married Eva Joy, and they have three children - Ethel, Eugene, and Langdon; and Etta is the wife of Alanson Richardson, of Lamoine, and has three children - Lelia, Edith, and Forrest.
AMUEL S. HACKETT, attorney- at-law and Justice of the Peace, for many years a resident of Detroit, Me., was born November 24, 1831, in the ad- jacent town of Pittsfield, in the same county, Somerset. His father, Richard Hackett, was a native of Danville, Me., and his mother,
whose maiden name was Mary Brown, was a native of Pittsfield, Me.
Richard Hackett in his younger days spent some years in school teaching. He came to Pittsfield in 1827, and he died here, March 29, 1852. Richard and Mary (Brown) Hack- ett reared two children: Samuel S., the sub- ject of this sketch; and Hiram B., who mar- ried Electa A. Horn, and is now living in Carmel, Me. The mother died October 3, 1873.
Samuel S. Hackett in his youth acquired a good common-school education, and when a young man he taught district schools, and also worked in a tannery. After his father's death he built a house in the village, where his mother resided for the rest of her life. Having perfected his preparatory law studies, he was admitted to the bar in 1861. Opening an office in Detroit, he began the practice of his profession; and in 1862 he took the man- agement of a tannery, and kept the books until 1872. Since that time he has given his entire attention to his law business.
On December 25, 1864, Mr. Hackett mar- ried Lydia J. Hanson, who was born in Palmyra, a neighboring town, April 17, 1839. She was the daughter of Meshach and Nancy (Tibbets) Hanson. Her father was a farmer and carpenter. He died in Palmyra; and her mother, who is still living, resides there with a son. Mrs. Hackett died April 20, 1896, leaving no children.
In politics Mr. Hackett is a Democrat. He has served as a Selectman for twenty years, and for nineteen years was chairman.
NAHUM TOTMAN.
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He was Town Clerk twenty-two years, and has been Town Treasurer and Town Agent for a number of terms, besides holding other offices. He is a member of the Masonic order, belong- ing to Plymouth Lodge, No. 75, of Plymouth.
IDWIN S. PRESCOTT, for over thirty years an enterprising merchant of Skowhegan, Me., where he is still successfully engaged in business, was born in Vassalboro, Kennebec County, this State, November 9, 1825, son of Dr. Oliver and Lydia (Chandler)
Prescott. Oliver Prescott was a native of Winthrop, Me., born September 24, 1791, and pursued his medical studies at Dartmouth. He practised his profession in Vassalboro for many years, or until his death, which occurred in June, 1853. He served as a member of the Board of Selectmen, and was a State Sen- ator two years. He was married July 16, 1821, and his family consisted of six chil- dren.
Edwin S. Prescott acquired his education in the common schools and at an academy in his native town. In 1849 he joined the Maine contingent of fortune-seekers, who made what was at that time the long and somewhat peril- ous journey to the Pacific coast, and spent eleven years in California, during which time he was engaged in mining and farming. Re- turning to Maine in 1860, he cultivated a farm in Winslow until 1865, when he came to Skowhegan, and became associated in mercan- tile business with Samuel W. Lawton, under the firm name of Lawton & Prescott. Since
the retirement of his partner he has conducted the business alone. He is one of the best known and most successful merchants of this town. He is a member of the California Pio- neers' Association, and attends its annual dinners regularly. In his religious views he is a Congregationalist.
Mr. Prescott was married in 1860 to Mar- garet Larrabee, of Vassalboro, Me. One child, a daughter, born to them in 1862, died in 1884.
ON. NAHUM TOTMAN, who pre- vious to his death in 1894 was one of the leading farmers and lumber dealers of Fairfield, Somerset County, was born October 5, 1808, at Abington, Mass., his parents being Thomas V. and Rhoda (Whitman) Totman. The father, a native of Abington and a shoemaker by trade, came to Fairfield in 1819, and engaged in farming. He died at Pishon's Ferry. His wife, Rhoda, born in Abington, bore him seven children - John, Nahum, Ezra, Thomas, Sarah, Louisa, and Rhoda. John, born in 1806, who died in 1890, was a chairmaker and later a merchant. He was twice married, successively to Iantha Roberts and Caroline Eaton. Ezra, born in 1810, who died in 1881, married Elizabeth Dunbar, and was engaged in the lumber business. Thomas, born in 1812, who be- came a farmer, married Lucy A. Gilman, of Norridgewock, Me. Both are now deceased. Sarah, born in 1814, became the wife of George Burrill, a farmer of Fairfield. Neither she nor her husband is living.
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Louisa, who was born in 1817, married David Sturgiss, of Vassalboro, Me., a farmer by oc- cupation. Both Mr. and Mrs. Sturgiss are now deceased. Rhoda, born in 1821, married Albert Nye, a carpenter, who was born in 1823, both of whom arc also deceased.
Nahum Totman resided with his parents until he was twenty-one years of age, recciv- ing his education in the common schools. He then went into the lumbering business in Fairfield, and was for some years in partner- ship with his brother Ezra. When his sons grew up, they were taken into company with him. He owned and operated many saw- mills, and dealt extensively in lumber. He also owned a number of large farms, and in all his business undertakings was most success- ful. Prominent in this section, he was well known as an active Republican. In the ses- sion of 1878-79 he occupied a seat in the Maine Senate. His death occurred March 27, 1 894.
Mr. Totman was married on November 24, 1842, to Susan F. Bryant, a native of this town. Mrs. Totman, who survives her hus- band, is still an active and energetic lady. She was born April 25, 1818, to William and Lydia (Haley) Bryant. Mr. Bryant, who was born in Sandwich, Mass., and was a hatter by trade, removed to Waterville in 1809 and thence to Rhode Island in 1813. In 1817 he came to Fairfield, where he en- gaged in the manufacture of hats. He bought a farm in 1832. Later in life he kept the toll bridge for seven years. For the last seven years of his life he lived with his daughter,
Mrs. Totman, and he died in 1867. His wife had died in 1858. Their five children were: Mary E., Harriet H., Susan F., Cyrus F., and Samuel Haley Bryant. Mary E., who is now deceased, was born March 27, 1810. She married William Connor, a lumber dcaler of this town. Harrict H., born May 17, 1814, who died December 22, 1895, mar- ried George Drew, of Fairfield. Cyrus F., who was born April 25, 1818, was twin brother of Mrs. Totman. He married Olive Sturgiss, of Vassalboro, whose death occurred on February 2, 1892; and he now lives with Mrs. Totman. Though now over eighty years old, he is as bright and active as when in his teens. Without spilling a drop, he can carry a glassful of water on his head while picking up a pin from the floor with his teeth. Sam- uel Haley Bryant, born September 25, 1823, never married. He went to Australia in 1852, and has not been heard from since 1890.
Mr. and Mrs. Totman have four sons --- Frank M., Llewellyn, Everett, and William H. Frank, who is a lumber and mill man, was born on August 19, 1843. He married Emma Judkins, of Fairfield, and became the father of eleven children, born as follows: Gertrude, February 22, 1865, now deceased ; Charles Haley, in August, 1868, also de- ceased; Cora L., December 16, 1869; Howard E., July 24, 1871; Henry F., February 10, 1873; Mary E., April 17, 1874, who died August 10, 1877 ; Capatolia L., December 24, 1879; Frank G., March 20, 1882; Washing- ton A., November 13, 1883; Gladys, Decem- ber 13, 1885; and Eloise G., April 25, 1887.
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Llewellyn Totman, who was born March 19, 1847, married Eldora F. Dunbar, who was born September 15, 1847. His children were: Charles A., born May 26, 1871, died December 17, 1890; Edward, born August 30, 187 -; Walter N., born January 9, 1882. He is now engaged in the livery business at Duluth, Minn. Everett Totman, who is now in business in Boston, Mass., was born Sep- tember 5, 1850. On December 19, 1875, he married Ella V. Brown, of Skowhegan, Me. For fifteen years he was a hardware merchant in Fairfield. William H. Totman, who was born on April 12, 1858, married Lucy A. Wyman, who was born on May 13, 1858. Three children have been born to him, as fol- lows: Ella V., April 20, 1882, now deceased ; Eva A., July 2, 1886, also deceased; and Christine L., born September 15, 1889. Mrs. Susan F. Totman continues to reside in Fair- field village, at her beautiful home.
LBION P. BLOOD, of Sebec, Piscat- aquis County, an industrious general farmer, son of Ira and Rachel (Pratt) Blood, was born in this town, March 6, 1835. His father was a native of Knox County, and his mother was born in Sebec. The former came to this town when a young man, and afterward followed farming here for some years. About the year 1847 he went to Wisconsin, where he resided throughout the rest of his life, and died in 1894 at a good old age. His first wife, Rachel, having died in early life, he was again married. Rachel
had four children, namely: George B., now a prosperous farmer of Penobscot County; Al- bion P., the subject of this sketch, Hiram, who resides upon a farm in Atkinson, Me. ; and William Henry Blood, now a ranchman in Kansas.
Albion P. Blood was thrown upon his own resources at an early age. When fourteen years old, having previously attended school in Foxcroft for a time, he shipped as a hand before the mast, on board of a coasting-vessel running between Rockland, Me., and New York. After following the sea for about two years, he returned to life ashore. For a num- ber of years after he was employed in the saw- mills upon the Penobscot River in the summer and in the woods during the winter, at- tending school at intervals, in order to obtain a better knowledge of the common branches of study. In February, 1857, he bought his present farm of one hundred acres, upon which, with the exception of five years, he has since resided. He has improved his land and buildings. Carrying on general farming with energy, he raises cattle, sheep, and hogs; cuts from thirty to forty tons of hay annually; keeps several Jersey cows; and weekly makes about thirty pounds of superior dairy butter, which brings a high price in the market.
On April 8, 1858, Mr. Blood married Sarah Elizabeth Marshall. Born in the Province of New Brunswick, April 9, 1838, Mrs. Blood is a daughter of William and Isabella Marshall, who died at the respective ages of fifty-five and fifty. The former was a tanner and a shoemaker. They were the parents of five
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children, all of whom are living; namely, Harriet, Sarah E., Charlotte, William, and John Marshall. The children of Mr. and Mrs. Blood are: Ira Lewis, Cora E., and Charles H. Ira Lewis Blood, who is a lum- berman in Montana, married Nellie Dow, and has two children - Ira L. Blood, Jr., and Everett L. Cora E. is the wife of Virgil Tucker, the secretary of the Jordan Lumber Company, of Old Town, Me. Charles H. Blood, who is paymaster for the Willimantic Lumber Company, married Ella Kincaid, and has four children - Leon, Marion, Lewis, and Virgil. In politics Mr. Blood, Sr., is a Democrat, and he has served as school agent. Both he and Mrs. Blood are connected with the Patrons of Husbandry in East Dover. Mrs. Blood attends the Methodist Episcopal church.
OHN BUNKER, one of the foremost farmers of Mercer township, was born June 28, 1839, in the neighboring town of Anson, son of Moses and Polly (Williams) Bunker. His grandparents, Elijah and Betsey (Smith) Bunker, removed from Barnstead, N. H., to Vienna, Kennebec County, Me., in the early part of the present century, settling on a farm, which Elijah conducted at the same time that he made shoes. In 1809 he moved to a farm in Anson, and six years later he went to Ohio. Both he and his wife died at the age of seventy-seven years. They had eleven children, all of whom, now deceased, were engaged in agricultural pursuits in Som- erset County. Of their number, Elijah, Jr.,
removed to Illinois, where he was also en- gaged in farming. His daughter, Mary, married George Bray, and died in Minnesota.
Moses Bunker was born on the homestead in Vienna. At the age of eighteen, having pre- viously worked with his father, he started in life on his own account. He walked to New- ton, Mass., a long journey for a foot passen- ger, and there was employed by a nurseryman and farmer for seven years. For several sub- sequent years he was engaged in tilling the soil in Anson, Me., living there until the spring of 1868, when he purchased the estate now owned and occupied by his son John in Mercer. Here he passed his declining days, dying at the venerable age of ninety-two years, on February 4, 1897. His wife, who before her marriage was Polly Williams, born in Anson, Somerset County, in 1809, died in Mer- cer, December 22, 1890. They were the par- ents of five children, namely: Lovisa, who died at a comparatively early age, having been the wife of Hiram T. Emery, who has since married Roxie Mitchell, and is now a resident of Anson; Abbie W., who lives in the village of Anson; John, the subject of this sketch; a child that died in infancy; and Marcellus, now engaged in trade at Madison, who married Lizzie Lombard.
John Bunker attended the district schools in his boyhood and afterward for a term the academy in North Anson. Soon after attain- ing his majority he, in company with H. T. Emery, his brother-in-law, bought the parental homestead in Anson, where he was engaged in agricultural pursuits from the fall of 1861
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until the fall of 1865. He and his father spent the next year on the Dinsmore farm, and in the following year they rented the Niron Gray farm. In August, 1862, he was drafted into the army, but evaded service by paying three hundred dollars for a substitute. In 1 868 he and his father bought the present farm in Mercer township, and continued the im- provements already begun, including the erec- tion of new buildings that are both commodi- ous and convenient. Mr. Bunker has now three hundred and fifty acres of land, a large part of which is in a good state of culture. As a general farmer, fruit-grower, and dairy- man he has met with much success. His estate is one of the historic places of the county, a portion of it having been used as a burial-ground from 1740 until 1800. It is also noted as having been the farm on which Frank A. Munsey, distinguished as the pub- lisher of a popular magazine, was born and bred. In politics Mr. Bunker is a straight- forward Republican, is active in town affairs, and for eight years has been one of Mercer's Board of Selectmen.
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Mr. Bunker was united in marriage on Janu- ary 3, 1863, with Miss Emeline B. Cutts, a native of New Portland, Me., born October 26, 1844. Her father, Captain George Cutts, a farmer and blacksmith, spent his entire life on New Portland Hill, dying there in August, 1866, aged fifty-eight years. His wife, whose maiden name was Annie Metcalf, passed away February 21, 1891, at the advanced age of four- score and two years. Mr. and Mrs. Bunker have seven children, namely: Edmund R., the
proprietor of a meat market in Kansas City, Mo., who married Jennie Kurney; J. Wallace, a spring bed manufacturer at Mercer, who married Hattie Gray; Vina May, who is the wife of James R. Pringle, a correspondent for the Boston Globe, residing at Gloucester, Mass. ; Delmont Moses, residing at home, who married Stella Dickinson; Mabel C., who married Melvin Gray, a farmer of Starks township; Solon S., born July 19, 1876, who lives on the home farm; and Charlie C., who has been attending school in Gloucester, Mass., since 1891, stands high in his classes, and on June 25, 1897, won the Haskell gold medal at the cadets' drill in the manual of arms.
APTAIN JEREMIAH JONES, a re- tired ship-master of Brooksville, Han- cock County, son of David and Tamson (Snowman) Jones, was born in this town, May 16, 1828. The grandfather, Jere- miah Jones, a native of Wells, Me., came here when a young man, settling on "The Point " at West Brooksville. He engaged in farm- ing and ship-building. The first schooner launched in this town, named the "Bethia," in honor of his wife, was built by him. He also kept a country store, and paid the largest tax assessed in his day. His death occurred when he was well advanced in years.
David Jones, who was a lifelong resident of Brooksville, having settled upon land owned by his father, cleared a large farm, which he cultivated industriously for the rest of his ac- tive period. His death occurred when he was
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eighty-six years old. His first wife, Betsey Burgess Jones, bore him two children - David and Betsey, neither of whom is living. Tam- son Snowman Jones, his second wife, be- came the mother of seven children ; namely, Jane, John, S. V. Jones, Emma and Bethia (twins), James, and Jeremiah. Of these the only survivors are: Captain Jones, the subject of this sketch; and S. V. Jones, a resident of Belfast, who married Hannah Blodgett, and has four children - Ellen, Verrill, Caroline, and George. The mother lived to be ninety- four years old.
Having completed his education at the Blue Hill Academy, Jeremiah Jones at the age of sixteen began to follow the sea. He com- manded a vessel before he was cighteen. During his forty-four years of seafaring, the most of which was spent as a master of ships engaged in the foreign trade, he visited vari- ous parts of the world. While master of the bark "Lucy Francis " he brought from Italy the statue of Daniel Webster that stands in front of the State House in Boston. He has built several vessels, utilizing for that purpose the few summer seasons spent at home dur- ing his seafaring days. Among them was the second three-masted schooner ever constructed cast of Cape Cod. In 1886 he settled perma- nently on the Wasson homestead in Brooks- ville. Since he abandoned the sea he has given his attention to the cultivation of his farm of two hundred and forty-four acres, which, among other staple products, yields an average of one hundred tons of hay an- nually.
Captain Jones married Lucy J. Wasson, a daughter of David and Abigail (Hatch) Wasson, of Brooksville. Her grandfather, Samuel Wasson, a Revolutionary soldier, ac- companied by his two brothers, came to this town from Massachusetts soon after the close of the war of independence, settled upon what has since been known as Wasson's Hill, and there spent the rest of his life, engaged in farming and taking quite an active part in public affairs. His death occurred in his seventy-ninth year. He was three times mar- ried, and the maiden name of Mrs. Jones's grandmother was Elizabeth Parker. David Wasson, Mrs. Jones's father, born February 19, 1794, died November 20, 1884. He was an extensive and successful farmer, and also built vessels, his yard being located near his home. He held some of the important town offices, represented this district in the legis- lature, and was one of the first Deacons of the Congregational church. Abigail Hatch Was- son, Mrs. Jones's mother, died September 25, 1886, aged eighty-eight years. Captain and Mrs. Jones have had seven children ; namely, Wasson, Harry, Laura H., James H., Fred D., Grace D., and Lucy W. Wasson died at the age of sixteen; Harry died in infancy ; James H. is a travelling salesman; Fred D. is in business in Belfast, Mc .; Grace D. re- sides at home; Laura H. and Lucy W. are school teachers. Both parents are members of the Patrons of Husbandry and of the Con- gregational church. The Captain is a Master Mason. He is a Republican in politics, hav- ing cast his first Presidential vote for Abra-
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ham Lincoln in 1860. In 1892 he was elected to the lower branch of the legislature.
AVID S. HUNNEWELL, M.D., a skilful and well-known physician of Somerset County, located in the village of Madison, where he has an extensive and lucrative patronage, was born March I, 1840, in Solon, Me. He is a son of Heman and Melinda (Smith) Hunnewell, the latter a native of the neighboring town of Bingham.
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