USA > Maine > Biographical sketches of representative citizens of the state of Maine > Part 5
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and grandson of Nicholas+ Sewall, born at New- bury, Mass., in 1690, who settled at York, Me., early in the eighteenth century, and who mar- ried Mchitable Storer. As shown in Coffin's His- tory of Newbury, Mass., Nicholas+ Sewall, born 1690, son of John3 and Hanmah (Fessenden) Sewall, was a descendant in the fourth genera- tion of Henry1 Sewall, of Newbury and Rowley, the line from Henry1 continuing through his only son, Henry,2 and his wife, Jane Dummer, to John,3 father of Nicholas.+ Chief Justice Samuel Sewall, it may be mentioned, was the eldest son of Henry2 and Jane (Dummer) Sewall and brother of John3: and their sister Anna was the wife of William1 Longfellow, the progenitor of the New England family which has given two honored names to American letters.
James Sullivan and Caroline G. (Sewall) Man- ley had three children-Joseph Homan, Abigail Sewall, and James Sullivan.
Joseph Homan Manley has been from his carly childhood a resident of Augusta, the home of three generations of his ancestors. At the age of eleven years, a delicate rather than a robust lad, he became a pupil in the Abbott Family School for boys, known as the Little Blue School, in Farmington. Here for four years he pursued his preparatory studies, with the expectation of taking a college course a little further on. The impaired state of his health, necessitating a pro- longed season of rest from mental activity, then prevented the carrying out of his cherished plan. At nineteen he began in Boston the study of law. In February, 1863, he was graduated Bachelor of Laws at the Albany (N.Y.) Law School, and in September of the same year (a month before he was twenty-one) was admitted to practice in that State.
Returning to Augusta, he became the law part- ner of Hilton W. True, Esq. Admitted to prac- tice in the United States District and Circuit Courts in 1865, he was appointed a Commissioner of the United States District Court of Maine. During the same year and the year following he was a member of the City Council of Augusta, serving as its president in 1866, and in 1877 as an Alderman. From 1869 to 1876 he served as agent for the internal revenue department of the United States government. For three years after, he was in Washington, D.C., as agent of
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the Pennsylvania Railroad in its relations with the United States treasury department.
Purchasing an interest in the Maine Farmer in the spring of 1878, he became general editor (or editor-in-chief) thereof, and devoted himself to editorial work for three years, or until his appoint- ment in May, 1881, by President Garfield, as post- master at Augusta. This office he filled for over seven years, under two Republican administra- tions, resigning it in August, 1892, to take, at the request of Benjamin Harrison, a position on the Republican National Executive Committee. He was a delegate to the Republican conven- tions of 1880, 1SSS, 1892, and 1900, and for six- teen years was chairman of the Republican State Committee of Maine, of which he was a member from 1SS1 to the time of his resigna- tion in 1901. In 1887, 1SSS, 1SS9, 1890, 1901, and 1902 Mr. Manley represented Augusta in the State Legislature, and he is now State Senator-elect. In 1901-he was Speaker of the House. He has been for many years a trustee and is now president of the Augusta Savings Bank, the third largest in the State: is also a director of the Edwards Manufacturing Com- pany, a director and treasurer of the Augusta Water Company, a director of the Kennebec Light and Heat Company, and a trustee of the Augusta City Hospital, and is therefore largely identified with the city's progress. He has been officially connected with the public library and the public school system; is a direc- tor of the Maine Central Railroad Company and of the Portland, Mount Desert & Machias Steamboat Company.
Energetic, able, and popular as postmaster, he secured local free delivery. As a trustee of the Cony Female Academy Fund and a men- ber of the high school committee, he has ren- dered important services to the educational in- terests of the community. As an editor his ability was particularly conspicuous, and as a writer he is both fluent and powerful. Possess- ing a pleasing address and a genial manner, his conversational powers are remarkably attrac- tive, and his acquaintances are almost invariably his friends.
He married October 4, 1866, Susan H. Cony, who was born March 5, 1839. She died Feb- ruary 17, 1896. She was the eldest daughter
of Governor Samuel Cony and his first wife, Mary H. Sewall, of Farmington, Mo. Her father, born in 1811, died at Augusta, October 5, 1870. He was a son of General Samuel+ and Susan B. (Cony) Cony, and a lineal descendant of Nathaniel Cony, who was in Boston as early as 1699, and who married in 1711 his second wife, Abigail Ayer. This descent was through Deacon Samuel,2 born in Boston in 1718: Lieu- tenant Samuel," born in 1746; General Samuel,+ born in 1775.
Deacon Samuel Cony married Rebecca Guild, of Dedham, Mass., daughter of Nathan- iel3 Guild (Samuel,2 John1). He removed from Shutesbury, Mass., to the Fort Western settle- ment, or Hallowell, Me., now Augusta, in 1777, his son, Lieutenant Samuel,3 removing from Easton, Mass. His son, the Hon. Daniel3 (father of Susan B., wife of Governor Samuel Cony), came in 1778. The Hon. Daniel Cony married Susanna, daughter of the Rev. Philip Curtis, of Sharon, Mass. Lieutenant Samuel Cony married Susanna Johnson, of Bridgewater, Mass. He became an extensive laudholder in Hallowell, Me. Samuel Cony was the first Adjutant-general of Maine, 1820-30.
Mr. Manley has four children-Samuel Cony, Lucy Cony, Harriet, and Sydney Sewall. In June, 1893, Lucy C. Manley became the wife of Chase Mellen, of New York City. She is the mother of three children: Joseph Manley, born June 5, 1894; Chase, Jr., born February 3, 1897; and William Palmer, born October 28, 1902.
EORGE B. HASKELL is a well-known citizen of Lewiston, Me., where he is engaged in mereantile business. Son of Cyrus and Pauline (Furbush) Haskell, he was born March 2, 1837, in that part of Lisbon, Androscoggin County, which in 1840 became the town of Webster.
His father, Cyrus Haskell, a native of Greene, Me., same county, was born January 21, 1801, and died in Lewiston in 1881. He was son of Israel Haskell, who died in the town of Free- man, Franklin County, Me.
William1 Haskell, who came to New England about 1637, and a few years later settled in Gloucester, Mass., is designated in a brief
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account of the family of this name as "the ancestor of most of the Haskells in this coun- try." His brothers Roger and Mark also left descendants. The former was a resident of Beverly, Mass.
William1 Haskell, born in England in 1617, died in Gloucester in 1693. He was a Deacon of the church, Selectman several years, and he served six times as a Representative to the General Court. He married in November, 1643, Mary, daughter of Walter Tybbot. They had nine children.
William2 Haskell, Jr., born in August, 1644, resided in Gloucester, Mass., and died in 1708. He married in July, 1667, Mary, daughter of William and Mary Brown and step-daughter of Henry Walker. Jacob3 Haskell, born in 1691, eleventh child of William, Jr., and his wife Mary, died in Gloucester, Mass., in August, 1756. He was a Deacon of the Second Church in Gloucester. His wife, Abigail Marcy, whom he married December 31, 1716, died in April, 1778. They had eight children-Jacob, Abner, Abigail, Alexander, Israel and Ames (twins), Esther, and Zebulon.
Israel,+ born October 30, 1729, married Abi- gail Davis, December 13, 1753. He removed from Gloucester, Mass., to New Gloucester, Me., and in 1775 again removed with his family to the Sylvester Plantation (now Turner, Me.), his being the first family that made a permanent settlement in that place. His children were: Abigail," who married Richard Phillips, Jr., in 1796; Hannah," who married Abner Phillips; Israel,5 who married Juda or Judith Wellman; Jacob,5 who married Mary Johnson, 1793; Esther," who married Joseph Tyler: Phebe,5 who married Samuel Tyler; Asa,5 who married Jemima Bray: Elizabeth," who married Daniel Bray, Jr., 1794; and Mary, who married Ne- hemiah Sawtelle. (Essex Institute Historical Collections, vol. xxxii., 1896; also reprint.)
There seems every reason to believe that Israel Haskell, who married Juda (Judith) Wellman, was the father of Cyrus Haskell, who was born in Greene, Androscoggin County, · Me., in 1801, as above mentioned.
Cyrus Haskell, father of George B., was by occupation a farmer. He resided successively in Freeman, in that part of Lisbon which be-
came Webster, and in Lewiston where he was for two or three years a member of the city government, being one of the Council. In poli- tics he belonged for some years to the Republi- can party, was afterward a Greeley man, and still later a Democrat. His wife, Paulina Fur- bush, died in Lewiston at the age of seventy- eight. Of their five children George B. is the only survivor. Three of the deceased left chil- dren, as follows: Isaac married Ann Littlefiel i. of Auburn, Me., and had two children, Lewis L. and Frank M. Charlotte R. married William P. Bowles, of Boston (formerly of Maine), and had two children, Frank H. and Lincoln. Eliza Jane married Samuel Hawthorne, of Bowdoin- ham, Me., and had one child, George E.
George B. Haskell, the special subject of this sketch, was educated in the public schools of Webster and the high school of Lisbon, and trained to agricultural pursuits on his father's farm. During the second year of the war for the preservation of the Union, or in July, 1962. he enlisted for three years in Company I. Six- teenth Maine Volunteer Infantry. under Colonel Tilden .. He was in all the battles in which the regiment was engaged up to August. 1864. ex- cept that of Fredericksburg, in December. 1962. Hle was a Corporal, and later was promoted to Sergeant. Taken prisoner at Gettysburg. he was confined for two months in Libby Prison and a short time in Belle Isle Prison. On the 19th of August, 1864, he again fell into the hands of the enemy, and was taken a second time to Libby Prison, whence he was removed to Belle Isle and later to Salisbury, N.C .. where on February 28, 1865, he was exchanged. After thirty-five months' service he was honorably discharged from the army. In the winter of 1868 he was Collector of Taxes and in 1s69 Selectman of Webster. Settling in Lewiston in 1869, he entered the employ of Mr. N. W. Farwell, proprietor of the Lewiston Bleachery and Dye Works. In 1879 Mr. Haskell succeeded to the business of Thompson & Hitchcock. dealers in seeds, etc. Selling out in 1553. he bought back the business in 1890, and has car- ried it on continuously from that time to the present. For a time in the eighties he was in the ice business. For two years he was Over- scer of the Poor, having previously served as
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Street Commissioner two years and in 1899 and 1901 as a member of the city government. In religion he is a Universalist and in politics a Republican. A member of the lower house of the Maine Legislature in 1900, 1901, 1903, and 1904, he served on the Committee on Pensions and on Banks and Banking. He was Commander of Custer Post, G. A. R., in 18S6, and in 1891 was Colonel of the First Encamp- ment of the Union Veteran Legion of Maine. He is a member of Knox Post, G. A. R., No. 20, of Lewiston, in which he has held various offices, and is now Quartermaster. He is a member of Golden Rule Lodge, I. O. O. F., of Lewiston, and a trustee of the People's Savings Bank. Public-spirited and progressive, ever ready to lend a hand to any good work of im- provement, he was one of the commission on the building of the Carnegie Library of Lewis- ton.
Mr. Haskell married, in 1868, Mary N. Mar- ston, a native of Monmouth, Me. She was born January 9, 1843, daughter of John and Lydia I. (Gilman) Marston. Her paternal grandfather was Nathaniel Marston, whose wife was a Wat- son. Mr. and Mrs. Haskell have two children: Chapin E., born in Lewiston, May 24, 1872; and Ethel M., born in Lewiston, May 12, 1877.
ALENTINE PINGREE, one of the most prominent and highly esteemed citi- zens of Lewiston and at present a member of the Board of Aldermen of that city, belongs to a family that has been established in New England upward of two hundred and · sixty years. Born in Gardiner, Me., on April 7, 1853, the only child of Page and Nancy (Jordan) Pingree, he can trace his ancestry baek through seven generations to Moses1 Pengry, an English colonist who became a land-owner in Ipswich, Mass., early in 1641, the deed being dated twelfth day of the first month, the year then beginning in March. In 1652 there was granted to him land "to set up his salt pans and works."
This founder of the Pingree family in Amer- ica was an influential citizen of the Massachu- setts Bay Colony in his day, serving as Select- man of Ipswich, as Deacon of the first church,
and in 1665 as Deputy to the General Court. His wife was Abigail Clement, of Haverhill, whose father, Robert Clement, represented Haverhill in the General Court seven years. Moses and Abigail Pengry had eight children. Aaron,2 the fourth child, who was born in 1652 and died in 1697, married Ann Pickard, of Rowley, Mass. She died February 20, 1716.
They had a son Aaron,3 who was born in Ipswich in 1683, and died in Rowley, Septem- ber 5, 1770. A deed exists showing that the elder Aaron deeded to his son on January 2S, 1713, half his land in Haverhill and Rowley. The younger Aaron received in 1725 a severe wound in the head, as a consequence of which he was disabled and received a discharge from the military service. He was twice married, and was the father of seven children. The first marriage was with Elizabeth Pearson, of Rowley, and took place December 17, 1707. She was born August 5, 1685, and died May 10, 1746. Her father was Stephen Pearson, and her grandfather John Pearson, who in 1643 set up in Rowley the first fulling-mill in America. Her mother's maiden name was Mary French. Aaron3 Pingree married for his second wife on October 5, 1750, Martha Clemons, of Middleton. Stephen,+ born Janu- ary 22, 1712, son of Aaron,3 removed in 1784 from Rowley to Fitchburg, where he died Oc- tober 21, 1794. He was twice married. His first wife, Jane Jewett, daughter of Nathaniel Jewett, of Rowley, died May 7, 1752. His second wife, Anna Jewett, born September 23, 1729, daughter of William and Hannah Jewett, died October 5, 1821. He married her on February 17, 1756. After his death she was twice married, first to Moses Sander- son, second to Captain Asa Houghton.
Stephen+ Pingree had three children. The youngest of these, Thomas,5 born June 2, 1745, was a soldier of the Revolution. At a town meeting held in Rowley on June 9, 1778, as stated in Gage's History, Thomas Pingree was hired to enter the service. In 1777 the town was called upon to raise fifty-eight men to serve three years, or during the war. In a list of fifty-five of that number from a roll dated October 2, 1779, occurs the name of Thomas Pingree, to whom was paid a bounty
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of fifteen dollars. In 1778 he is described in a muster-roll as follows: age, thirty-three; height, five feet, eight inches; complexion, light; eyes, blue; hair, brown; residence, Rowley. He was a three years' man. After the close of the war he removed to Hen- niker, N.H., where he resided until his death, which occurred about 1814. Thomas5 Pingree married, first, Hannah Chapman, of Ipswich, their banns being published on De- cember 13, 1766. After her death, Septem- ber 2, 1776, he married Mollie Burnham, of Ipswich, banns with her being published May 24, 1777. He had three children, the young- est being Parson6 (grandfather of Mr. Val- entine Pingree), born in Rowley, August 21, 1776, died March 10, 1862. Industrious and thrifty, he accumulated a large property. He was a prominent member of the Baptist church. His first wife was Sarah Brown. After his marriage with her he removed to Denmark, Me., where she died March 12, 1836. On Jan- uary 12 of the following year he married Sarah Frost. He died March 10, 1862.
Pago Pingree, youngest of the nine chil- dren of Parson Pingree, was born in Denmark, Me., March 13, 1822, and died October 8, 1893. For thirty-eight years before his death he had resided in Lewiston, going to that city from Gardiner. He was the first superintendent of Riverside Cemetery, and held the position for twenty-one years, finally resigning on account of ill health. He was a member of Cumber- land Lodge of Odd Fellows of Bridgton. Page l'ingree was married on January 1, 1851, to Nancy Jordan, who died April 12, 1902. She was born at Lisbon, Me., December 28, 1817. Her father, Valentine Jordan, was born at Scarboro, October 20, 1786. Her . mother, Tabitha Jordan, was born on Richmond Island in Portland Harbor, October 20, 178S.
Valentines Pingree received his schooling in Lewiston. For twenty years he was em- ployed in the office of the Lewiston Journal as book-keeper. He then went West, and for a year worked in the boot and shoe business for his cousin, the late Governor Hazen S. Pingree, of Michigan. At the end of that time he returned to Lewiston, where he remains a resident. He has always been actively inter-
ested in pubhe affairs, and has taken part in politics, uniformly supporting the Republican party. In 1900 he was chosen to the Common Council. At present he represents Ward Two at City Hall as Alderman. He is one of the heavy tax-payers of Lewiston. Mr. Pingrec is a member of Manufacturers' and Mechanics' Lodge, No. 62, I. O. O. F., of Lewiston, and has taken much interest in the growth of the lodge. He was married on March 12, 1878, in Fairfield, to Ellen M. Coleord, who was born in that place on September 11, 1851, daughter of Lorenzo Coleord. Mr. and Mrs. Pingree have no children.
LCANDER BURBANK, M.D., for many years a successful practising physician in Lewiston, Me., and during the Civil War a surgeon in the United States army, died in Lewiston, Me., January S, 1884. A native of Shelburne, Coos County, N.H., born June 11, 1822, he was son of Barker and Polly (Ingalls) Burbank and one of a family of fourteen children reared by his parents.
His paternal grandfather, Eliphalet Burbank, was born in Bradford, Mass., June 22, 1760, son of Abraham and Abigail (Savory) Burbank. The father of Eliphalet was probably the Abra- ham born in Bradford, November 18. 1727 (Town Records), son of Eliezer and Hannah Burbank.
Abigail Savory, who was married to Abraham Burbank April 25, 1753, was a daughter of Robert3 Savory (born in 1694) by his second wife, Rebecca, daughter of Aquila? Chase (Aquila1). Robert3 Savory was son of William? Savory, born in 1659, and grandson of Robert1 Savory, one of the first settlers of Bradford, Mass., going there from Newbury, Mass.
Eliphalet Burbank married in January, 1781, Susanne Barker, of Bradford. He removed to Maine in 1802, and settled on a farm in the town of Gilead, where he died in 1816. His widow died in 1847. They reared a large fam- ily.
Barker Burbank, son of Eliphalet, is spoken of in the History of Coos County, N.H., as a "practical farmer, a successful merchant, and a lawyer of considerable ability." He married
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Polly Ingalls, daughter of Fletcher Ingalls and grand-daughter of Deacon David Ingalls, one of the early settlers of Shelburne. The home of Barker Burbank was a large and handsome house that he built near the home of his father- in-law. One of his sons was Robert Ingalls Burbank, who was graduated at Dartmouth College in 1843, studied law, was admitted to the Suffolk County (Massachusetts) bar in 1846, and later for many years was judge of the Mu- nicipal Court of South Boston, where he died in May, 1$93.
Aleander was the second son of his parents. He grew to manhood in his native place, and was educated in the public schools. He began the study of medicine under the instruction of a physician in a neighboring town, and was graduated from the medical school connected with Dartmouth College in 1847. He also attended medical lectures in Boston. Settling in Lewiston in the same year in which he re- ceived his diploma, he remained a resident for life, and until his health failed was actively and successfully engaged in the duties of his profession. During the Civil War he spent some four years as an army surgeon, holding his position by Congressional appointment. For two years he served as Representative from Lewiston in the Maine Legislature, and for nine years he was one of the trustees of the State Asylum for the Insane at Augusta. He was interested in educational matters, and for some time was superintendent of the schools of Lew- iston.
Dr. Burbank married April 7, 1847, Vesta Low- ell, a native of Lewiston, Me., born March 30, 1825. Her father. the Hon. James Lowell, was born in Buckfield, Me., January 5, 1791; and her mother, whose maiden name was Han- nah Paul, was born in New Gloucester, Me., May 19, 1793. James Lowell was a descendant in the eighth generation of Percivall Lowle (Lowell), who came from England, and settled at Newbury, Massachusetts Bay Colony, in June, 1639. The line was Percivall: Richard2; Percival,3 born in 1640; Captain Gideon,4 born in 1672; Stephen,5 born in Newbury, 1703; Stephen," born in Amesbury in 1728; William," born in Windham, Me., 1768; James,8 born in 1791.
Percival,3 son of Richard and his wife Mar- garet, married Mary, daughter of William Chand- ler, of Newbury. Gideon's+ second wife, mother of Stephen,5 was Mary Swett. Stephen? mar- ried Miriam Collins. Stephens married Agnes Bolton, of Falmouth, Me., and settled in Wind- ham. Willian married Margery Irish.
At the age of twenty-one James Lowell came to Lewiston, attracted by the natural advant- ages of the place as a site for a manufacturing town, and bought a large traet of land as an investment and for a home. He was one of the first settlers and one of the founders of Lewiston, contributing largely to its growth and prosperity.
He carried on a large business as keeper of a general merchandise store. He also con- ducted a tannery and a harness shop. A leader in town affairs and the first to hold various offices, he was Treasurer of Lewiston for twenty years. He served as Representa- tive in the Legislature several years and as State Senator two years, 1853 and 1854, his brother William, of West Minot, Me., serving at the same time, and his brother Stephen also in 1853. They were all Whigs, and later Re- publicans, in politics. James Lowell was the first president of the Lewiston Falls Bank, now the First National Bank of Lewiston. He died July 27, 1858. His wife, Hannah Paul, whom he married May 1, 1814, died at Lewiston, February 20, 1869. They had four children- Mark, James, Jr., Daniel, and Vesta. The survivors are Daniel and Vesta (Mrs. Bur- bank).
Mark Lowell, born in Lewiston, March 17, 1815, died September 15, 18SS. He married first, December 28, 1836, Ann Somes Trask Davis, by whom he had three children-Eliza D., Amanda, and Hannah. By his second wife, Alma E. Burbank, he had two children-Ed- ward and Alma E. Eliza D. married John S. Cook of Lewiston, and became the mother of six children, namely-Minnie, Henry, Albert (deceased), Lucy (deceased), Mark, and James.
Amanda married John Cotton, of Washing- ton, D.C. Their only child, Effie, is the wife of Fred Carlisle. Hannah married Samuel French, of Vermont, and had one child, a daughter, May E. Edward Lowell married
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Cora Hartshorn, of Vermont, and has two children, Anna and Marion. Alma E. married Willard Dunn, of Waterville, Me., and has one child, Mabel.
James Lowell, Jr., born August 14, 1817, died August 6, 1850. He married April 20, 1837, Jane Barker, of Lewiston. They had three children-Vesta Jane (deceased), Eliza- beth (deceased), and Philip G. Vesta married James Drake, of Auburn, Me., and had three children-Edward, Philip (deceased), and Liz- zie. Elizabeth married Alvin Woodman, and died, leaving no children. Philip G. married Carrie Perkins, of Ellsworth, Me., and had two children, Kate and Dorothy.
Daniel Lowell, born July 16, 1819, married Amanda Gorham, of Auburn, Me., and is a resident of that city. He has two sons, James and Charles, and no daughters. James mar- ried Etta Crockett, and has four children- Grace, Millie, Arthur, and Walter. Grace married Calvin Young, and has one child. Millie married William Rieker, of Auburn, and has one child. Arthur married Alicia Coleman, of Auburn, and has one child, a daughter, Doris. Charles Lowell married Maud Randall, and has one child, Blanche.
Dr. Alcander Burbank and his wife Vesta, during their early married life, became the parents of three children: James Lowell Bur- bank, born August 13, 1849, lived but four days; James Barker Burbank, born February 5, 1852, died August 13, 1852: Guy Howard, born August 10, 1861, died August 28, 1861.
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