USA > Maine > Genealogical and family history of the state of Maine, Volume I > Part 40
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name of Donovan, once accompanied the se- lectman on his visit to the school under the latter's supervision. Not quite satisfied with the methods prevailing, the town official asked the teacher his credentials as an instructor. On their departure the scholars asked the master what credentials meant. "I don't know nor care," said he, "but I suppose it is some Latin word Donovan has put into his head." John McKeen became an elder in the Presby- terian church, served as selectman several years, was representative to the general court in 1778, and appears to have held a place in the community similar to that filled by his father.
He married his cousin Mary, daughter of John and Janet McKeen ; children : I. James, married - Cunningham ; lived in Peters- borough, New Hampshire, and was father of Judge Levi McKeen, of Poughkeepsie, New York; died 1789. 2. John, married Janet Tay- lor ; was a captain in the revolutionary war. The late James McKeen, counsellor at law in New York City in 1850, was his son. 3. Rob- ert, married Mary McPherson; lived in An- trim, New Hampshire, and Corinth, Vermont ; died 1809. His son, Joseph McKeen, was for several years superintendent of schools in New York City. 4. William, married Nancy Tay- lor, served in the revolutionary war; died 1824. 5. Annis, died unmarried. 6. Joseph, born October 15, 1757, died July 15, 1807, at Brunswick, Maine. 7. Janet, married John Taylor, Jr. ; five children. 8. Daniel, married (first) Janet Wilson, (second) Lucy Martin, widow of John Nesmith, of Windham, and lived upon the homestead in Londonderry. 9. Samuel, married (first) Elizabeth Taylor, (second) Mary Clark.
(V) Joseph, sixth child of John and Mary McKeen, displayed early a fondness for study, and under the tuition of Rev. Simon Williams, of Windham, New Hampshire, was prepared for college and entered Dartmouth when he was thirteen. He showed a marked predi- lection for mathematical studies and graduated in 1774 with the reputation of being also a good classical scholar. He at once became the school teacher of his native town of Lon- donderry and continued in that occupation with brief interruptions for eight years. In 1778 he served as sergeant in Captain James Gilmore's company, Colonel Gale's regiment, in the patriot army, taking part in General Sullivan's Rhode Island campaign. In the summer of 1780 he pursued a course of study in natural philosophy, mathematics and astron- omy under Professor Samuel Williams, of
Harvard University, and was subsequently an assistant teacher at Phillips Academy, Ando- ver, Massachusetts, with Rev. Dr. Eliphalet Pearson, afterwards professor of Hebrew at Harvard. Having determined to enter the ministry he pursued his theological studies at Windham, New Hampshire, under the direc- tion of his old instructor, Rev. Mr. Williams. Under license from Londonderry Presbytery he preached for a time to a body of Presby- terians in Boston. In 1785 he severed his connection with the presbytery, and on May TI was ordained pastor of the Congregational church at Beverly, Massachusetts, a position made vacant by the election of his predecessor to the presidency of Harvard College. Here he labored for seventeen years with great ac- ceptance. Though not a brilliant preacher, he was a most instructive and helpful one, and by exemplary life and fidelity to his pastoral duties won the respect and confidence of the entire community. Illustrative of his sense of duty was his failure to be present at a formal dinner to which he had been invited and at which General Washington was the guest of honor, because on the way thither he received an urgent call to the bedside of a humble par- ishioner in a distant part of the town. In 1801 he accepted an election to the presidency of the newly organized Bowdoin College, and on September 2, 1802, was formally inaugu- rated. In this capacity he fully met the ex- pectations formed concerning him. His thor- ough scholarship, his good judgment and his knowledge of human nature accomplished much for the institution under his charge. Great was the grief of its friends when after a lingering and obscure illness, which at last took the form of dropsy, he died July 15, 1807, in his fiftieth year.
President McKeen was above the ordinary stature, and of commanding personal appear- ance. Gentlemanly and affable in his manner, he easily accommodated himself to any com- pany. His theological creed was for "sub- stance of doctrine," in accord with the Assem- bly's Shorter Catechism, and he did not oppose the more liberal views beginning to be held by some of his Massachusetts neighbors. By no means. destitute of the ancestral Scotch wit, his words to one who was personally an inti- mate friend well illustrates his type of humor. Being exceedingly busy he remarked to his wife as he went upstairs to his study : "I can't see even the Apostle Paul to-day should he call." A little later this friend appeared, and on inquiring of Mrs. McKeen whether her hus- band was engaged, was told of his remark.
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The dialogue had hardly finished when Presi- dent McKeen recognized his friend's voice and bade him come up. No sooner was he seated than the friend rallied the president on his in- consistent action. "That is easily explained," returned he, "I expect to discuss theology with the Apostle Paul in another world, but so er- roncous are your views on the subject that I feel I must improve, in your case, every opportunity the present life affords." Presi- dent McKeen was chosen to preach the "elec- tion" sermon in 1800, received the degree of doctor of divinity from Dartmouth in 1804, and was a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, to whose transactions he contributed several papers. He married, Feb- ruary 2, 1786, Alice, daughter of James and Nancy ( Woodburn) Anderson, who was born July 19, 1758, at Londonderry, New Hamp- shire, and died March 21, 1834, at Brunswick. Their eight children were all born in Beverly, Massachusetts. Three daughters ( Mary, Alice and Margaret) died in infancy; the others were: I. Joseph, born March 12, 1787, died December 12, 1865. 2. Nancy, born July 2, 1788, died May 15, 1849. 3. John, born De- cember 21, 1789, died December 2, 1861. 4. James, born November 27, 1797, died Novem- ber 28, 1873. 5. Alice, born 1800; married May 31, 1826, William Jewett Farley Esq., a graduate of Bowdoin College, class of 1820, and a lawyer of Thomaston, Maine. She died wthout issue, in May, 1827.
(VI) Joseph (2), eldest son of President McKeen, was born March 12, 1787, and died December 2, 1865. He was a prominent busi- ness man of Brunswick. Though not a grad- uate of the college he was connected with its administration from early manhood, serving as overseer from 1813 to 1829, and as treasurer from 1829 till his death in 1865. To his abil- ity, shrewdness and integrity the institution owes much. He was cashier of the Union Bank from 1859 till its reorganization as a national bank, and then served as its presi- dent. He was a director and trustee of the Kennebec & Portland Railroad Company, and for some time its treasurer. Well read in several departments of literature and especially versed in biblical history and geography, he received the honorary degree of A. M. from Bowdoin in 1843. A member of the First Parish Church, he was especially prominent in the work of its Sunday school, and occa- sionally conducted religious services in adjoin- ing communities. He was "a marked man, of clear intellect, of decided opinions, of an energy appalled by no difficulties, of unques-
tioned sincerity, of great liberality and kind- ness of heart."
Mr. McKeen married, June 17, 1828, Eliza- betli Farley, born April 6, 1810, in Waldo- boro, Maine, and died March 3, 1881, at Brunswick. Their children, all born in Bruns- wick, were: 1. Elizabeth Farley, born April 26, 1830; for many years a most highly es- teemed teacher of English literature in the Brunswick high school, and subsequently at Miss Porter's school at Farmington, Connec- ticut; died unmarried, October 3, 1907, at Farmington. 2. Joseph, born October 15, 1832, died January 15, 1881. 3. Nancy Dun- lap, born October 23, 1837, died August 19, 1883. 4. James, born December 5, 1844. 5. Alice Farley, born April 18, 1855.
Nancy, daughter of President McKeen, married, May 21, 1821, David, son of John and Jeanette (Dunning) Dunlap, who was born January 21, 1778, at Brunswick, and died there February 5, 1843. He was a prominent and successful merchant, represented the town in the general court of Massachusetts and in the Maine legislature for several years. He was an overseer of Bowdoin College for nearly thirty years, and a member of the American Board of Commissioners for For- eign Missions. "Highly respected as a citi- zen, he was noted for his charities to benevo- lent objects." His wife survived him six years, dying May 15, 1849. Beside a son who died in childhood, they had Alice McKeen Dunlap, born August 1, 1827, died September 15, 1905.
(VI) John (2), second son of President McKeen, was prepared for college under the tuition of Rev. Jonathan Ellis, of Topsham, and graduated at Bowdoin in 1811. Ill health interfered with his plans for professional study, and he settled in Brunswick, being en- gaged part of the time in trade, but chiefly as an agent and administrator of estates. He served as postmaster for one term, as town clerk for twenty-three years, and was county commissioner in 1838. As secretary of the board of overseers from 1839 till his death, he maintained a close connection with the in- stitution whose graduates he knew so well. By nature and training an antiquarian, he be- came one of the founders and most valued members of the Maine Historical Society. Its collections and the pages of several town his- tories bear evidence to his industrious re- searches. "A Scotch Presbyterian in matters of faith, he adhered with wonderful tenacity to the doctrines of his church, but as exempli- fied in his life they were divested of all their rigor and sharpness." He married, November
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30, 1831, Frances, daughter of Richard and Elizabeth (Giddings) Toppan, who was born at Newburyport, Massachusetts, November 13, 1792, and died at Brunswick, October 27, 1881. Their only child, Frances Ann McKeen, was born August 5. 1833, and resides on McKeen street, Brunswick, Maine. To her the writer is indebted for much assistance.
(VI) James (3), youngest son of President McKeen, was graduated at Bowdoin in 1817, and entered upon the study of medicine, com- pleting his course at Harvard in 1820. He settled at once at Topsham, where he was a successful practitioner for half a century. From 1825 to 1839 he was professor of ob- stetrics in the Medical School of Maine, and during the last two years was also lecturer upon medical theory and practice. During his professorship he made the tour of Europe, studying in different hospitals. Of his ex- periences in Dublin anecdotes are told which illustrate the courage, the persistence and the enthusiasm which were prominent traits in his character. He was to the close of his life an earnest student, being interested not alone in medicine but in natural science and liter- ature. "Among the citizens of Topsham no one will be longer or more dearly remem- bered than he of whom it has been said that 'upon his good name no stain ever rested.' Dr. McKeen married (first) Sarah Jewett Farley. born December 16, 1799, died March 26, 1831; (second) June 3, 1834, Octavia Frost, born May 2, 1809, died September 4, 1890. His only child, Alice, died December 24, 1825, aged six months.
(VII) Joseph (3), eldest son of Treasurer McKeen, graduated at Bowdoin in 1853, at- tended lectures in New York City and at the Medical School of Maine, where he received the degree of M. D. in 1856. He at once set- tled in the practice of his profession in Tops- ham, being associated for many years with his uncle, Dr. James McKeen. He was in- terested in the public schools of the place and served on the school committee and as super- visor with acceptance. Possessed of a good voice and a fine musical taste, his services of song in church choirs will be long remem- bered by those who enjoyed it. Dr. McKeen married, March 12, 1862, Frances Caroline, daughter of Smith and Tamson Chase, who survived him. dying October 12, 1906, at Brunswick. Their children, born in Topsham, were: I. Sarah Jewett, born April 16, 1863; married Llewellyn R. Call, of Richmond, Maine. and died February 19, 1903. 2. Jo-
seph, born March 21, 1878; is in the hard- ware business at Brunswick, Maine.
Nancy Dunlap McKeen, daughter of Treas- urer McKeen, married July 25, 1861, Charlton Thomas, son of Joseph J. and Mary Sinton (Miner) Lewis, who was born February 25, 1834, at West Chester, Pennsylvania, and died May 26, 1904, at Morristown, New Jersey. Dr. Lewis graduated at Yale University in 1853, was for a few years a clergyman in the Methodist Episcopal church, then professor of languages at the University of Illinois, and acting president of Troy University (New York). In 1864 he settled in New York City and engaged in the practice of law, attaining a high reputation as an authority on insurance law. He was a most brilliant and versatile scholar, edited Harper's "Latin Dictionary," translated Bengel's "Gnomon of the New Tes- tament," and wrote a "History of Germany." besides numerous essays, poems and addresses. In 1870-71 he was managing editor of the New York Post. He received the degree of Doctor of Philosophy from New York Uni- versity, 1877, and of Doctor of Laws from Harvard in 1903. Mrs. Lewis died at Nor- folk, Connecticut, August 19, 1883, leaving four children : 1. Joseph McKeen Lewis, born June 26, 1863, at Brunswick, graduated at Yale in 1883, studied at Berlin and Athens, was tutor at Yale, and died April 29, 1887, at Morristown, New Jersey, leaving an enviable reputation for scholarship and ability. 2. Charlton Miner Lewis, born March 4, 1866, at Brooklyn, New York; graduated at Yale, 1886; at Columbia Law School, 1889; prac- ticed law in New York City. 1889 to 1895: instructor in English at Yale University, 1895- 98, securing the degree of Ph.D. in the latter year ; Emily Sanford professor of English Literature at Yale since 1899, and author of numerous books. Professor Lewis married, June 16, 1903, Grace H. Robbins, of St. Paul, Minnesota. 3. Elizabeth Dike Lewis, born August 13, 1873, at Bethel, Maine ; graduated at Smith College in 1895, received the degree of A. M. in 1898; married June 30, 1904, Professor Clive Day, Ph.D., of Yale Univer- sity ; they have one daughter, Margaret, born October 5, 1905. 4. Mary Sinton Lewis, born September, 1876, at New York City; was educated at Smith College, class of 1897; married, October 17. 1907, Captain John Leitch, of Dundee, Scotland.
(VII) James (4), youngest son of Treas- urer McKeen, was born December 5. 1844; graduated with honors at Bowdoin. 1864;
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studied law in the office of his brother-in- law, Charlton M. Lewis, in New York City, was admitted to the bar in 1866, and, with the exception of a year spent in Europe, dur- ing which he attended lectures on jurispru- dence and political economy at Paris and at Berlin, has been engaged in the successful practice of his profession in New York City, residing in Brooklyn, where he also maintains a law office. He was appointed by Governor Roosevelt a member of the commission to revise the charter of "Greater New York," served as assistant corporation counsel, was the candidate of the Republicans for justice of the supreme court in 1903, and was asso- ciate counsel with Governor Hughes in the insurance investigation of 1905. He is now the legal adviser of the Mutual Insurance Company of New York. Mr. McKeen has been actively interested in education, serving as a member of the Brooklyn education board, as trustee of the College of the City of New York, and of the Packer Collegiate Institution, and as an overseer of Bowdoin College since 1886. He received the degree of LL.D. from his alma mater in 1900. On retiring from the presidency of the Hamilton Club, the leading social organization of Brooklyn, which he had held for ten years, a fellow member charac- terized him in these phrases : "A logician with a capacity for eloquence, a man with humor without malice or a tinge of vulgarity, pos- sessing decision of character without stub- borness of opinion, too learned for over confi- dence, too just for arrogance, too fair for dic- tation and too wise for vanity."
Mr. McKeen married, in 1871, Mary Ellen, daughter of Joseph J. and Mary S. ( Miner) Lewis. Their summer home is at Jewell's Island, on the Maine coast. Their children, besides a son that died in infancy, are three daughters, all born in Brooklyn : 1. Helen Jo- sephine, graduated at Bryn Mawr, 1900; studied law at Berlin and New York City, received the degree of LL.B. at New York University, 1905, and was admitted to the bar in 1906. 2. Elizabeth Farley, graduated at Bryn Mawr, 1901 ; studied at Oxford and engaged in literary work. 3. Anna Lewis, graduated at Bryn Mawr, 1904.
Alice Farley McKeen, daughter of Treas- urer McKeen, married Frederic Livingston Scott, a merchant of Farmington, Connecticut. Their only child is Elizabeth McKeen Scott.
Alice McKeen Dunlap, daughter of Nancy (McKeen) Dunlap, married, October 15, 1850, Charles Jervis, son of Nathaniel and Eliza- beth (Gardiner) Gilman, who was born at
Exeter, New Hampshire, February 26, 1824, and died at Brunswick, February 5, 1901. Mr. Gilman was educated at Phillips Academy, Exeter, and the Harvard Law School, and received the honorary degree of A. M. from Dartmouth College. He was admitted to the New Hampshire bar, but did not practice his profession after he removed to Brunswick in 1850. He was prominent in political affairs, served in the Maine legislature in 1854, was a member of congress in 1857-59, and a dele- gate to the Republican national convention at Chicago in 1860. Mrs. Gilman died in Sep- tember 15, 1905, in the mansion built by her grandfather in which she had dispensed a gracious hospitality for half a century. Their four children, all born in Brunswick, are: I. David Dunlap Gilman, born July 26, 1854; graduated at Bowdoin, 1877; for many years paymaster of the Cabot Manufacturing Com- pany. 2. Elizabeth Jervis Gilman. 3. Charles A. Gilman. 4. Mary Gardiner Gilman, libra- rian of Curtis Memorial Library, Brunswick, Maine.
(III) John, second son of James Mc- Kean, was born about 1675, in Ireland, and prepared to go to America with his elder brother James, but died a short time previous to the embarkation. His widow Jeanette, with her three sons-James, Robert and Sam- uel -- and her infant daughter Mary accom- panied her brother-in-law James Mc Kean and his family to America in 1718 and settled in Londonderry, New Hampshire, where she had a lot assigned to her. She afterwards mar- ried Captain John Barnett, one of the early" settlers of the town. Her sons were the progenitors of the McKeans of Deering, An- trim, Amherst and Nashua, New Hampshire and Cherry Valley, New York. John, the first, was the ancestor of McKeans of Nova Scotia. Robert, the second, settled in Penn- sylvania, was engaged in the French and In- dian wars, promoted to the rank of major, and was captured and put to death by torture. He spelled the name McKean, and descendants of that name are located in Cecil, Maryland, and also in Huntington and Bradford counties, same state. Samuel, the third, is subject of the next paragraph. Mary, the youngest, mar- ried her cousin John McKean, previously men- tioned in this article.
(IV) Samuel, third son of John McKean, was born in Londonderry, Ireland, or vicinity, and came to this country with his mother and her other children in 1718. He married Ag- nes -, and settled in Amherst, New Hampshire. Children: I. Hugh, was killed
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by Indians in the old French war. 2. John, massacred at Fort William Henry in the French and Indian war; the Indians thrust pitch pine skewers into his flesh, then lighted them and burned him to death. 3. Robert set- tled in Cherry Valley, New York, and be- came a "captain of renown"; also killed by Indians during the battle at Wyoming, Penn- sylvania. 4. James, married Jane Scott Mc- · Kean; settled at Amherst. 5. Samuel, men- tioned below. 6. William, married Ann Gra- ham; settled in Deering, New Hampshire ; among their eleven children was William Mc- Kean Jr., member of the state senate, 1844-45. 7. Mary. 8. Martha. 9. Agnes. 10. Jane.
(V) Deacon Samuel (2), son of Samuel (1) McKeen, was born in Amherst. He lived in early life at Amherst, then at Windham, New Hampshire, and finally settled at Bel- fast, Maine, where he became a leading citi- zen, town officer and deacon of the church. He married Janet, daughter of Hugh Gra- ham, a direct lineal descendant of Graham, Earl of Montrose, supposed to be James Gra- ham, the fifth earl, and twentieth in line of descent from William de Graeme, who lived in the reign of David I of Scotland, or James, Duke of Montrose, who is the twenty-sixth chief in authentic record, according to Mclan. (See Graham family.) Two of their sons set- tled in Acworth, and the father, while living with them in his old age, died there in 1784. Children : 1. Hugh, soldier in the revolution and a pensioner ; married (first) - - Dan- ford (or Danforth) ; married (second) Mary Gregg ; children : Samuel, Hugh, D. Danford, William, J. Calvin, Solomon; Mary, married P. Clark; Joanna, William. 2. John, soldier in the revolution, and a pensioner late in life ; married (first) Mary Gregg, ( second) Mar- tha Dunn; children : Samuel, John, Hugh, Betsey, Samuel. 3. Samuel, married Jane Ayres. 4. Ephraim, mentioned below. 5. Isaac, married (first) Martha Drew ; (second) Betsey Cogswell, of Castine, Maine, and she died in 1856, aged eighty-six. 6. Abner. 7. Janet or Jane, married Jacob Eames; seven children. 8. Nancy. 9. Martha, married Samuel True, of Searsport, Maine. 10. Kez- iah, married Joseph Ayres, brother of Sam- uel's wife.
(VI) Ephraim, son of Deacon Samuel (2) McKeen, was born in New Hampshire, in 1766, and died in Belfast, Maine, in 1848. He married Lucy Ayres, of Merrimac, New Hampshire. They had ten children, of whom but five lived to maturity: I. Nancy, born 1801 : married William Ryan, of Belfast.
Maine; died February 9, 1883; children: i. Ann Maria, born July 25, 1820, died 1822; ii. Charles F., born November 13, 1822, died young; iii. William Henry, born June 21, 1824, married Sarah Cunningham; iv. Lucy E., born December 24, 1825; died 1828; v. Benjamin Franklin, born January 5, 1828, married Sylvia Ames; was lost in the wreck of the "Central America," off Virginia, on his return from California; vi. Lewis H., born November 26, 1829, married Martha Esther Hopkins, and had five children: Edwin, born 1845, lives in East Boston; Adelaide, born 1857; Maria, born 1860, lives in Boston ; Alice, born 1862; Mary, born 1873, lives in East Boston; vii. George F., born February II, 1831 ; married March 10, 1862, Ellen P. Mad- dock (their three children reside in Belfast, Maine : Lillian V., born October 19, 1864; Lucy E., born October 19, 1864; Franklin G., born August 6, 1866) ; viii. Thomas E., born January 13, 1833, married Lydia S. Wyman, and died January, 1863, son Thomas E., born March, 1863, resides in Lowell. 2. Joseph, born July 17, 1805; mentioned below. 3. Lucy Maria, married Samuel Hanson; had four sons and two daughters: Ephraim, a mariner ; Clarence Hanson; Robert Hanson, died in Belfast; Mary Hanson, married John Pierce, and lives in Portland, parents of Dr. Thomas Pierce, of California; Lucy Hanson, married Parsons, of New York .. 3. Betsey, married Josiah Curtis, of Swanville, Maine, October 26, 1834; children: i. Frank Curtis, born October 31, 1835, married Kate Hinckley, of Monroe, Maine, November I, 1864, and has two daughters: Rose and Blanche ; ii. Prescott, born June 1, 1837; mar- ried January 1, 1867, Amanda Young, of Searsport, and had one son Leroy, married Lillian Snyder, of Colorado; iii. Americus J., born April 15, 1839, resides at Montville, Maine ; iv. Mahlon, born March 4, 1841, mar- ried, November, 1866, Ellen Brown, of Burn- ham, Maine, and has three sons and two daughters ; v. Almeda, born February 19, 1844, married George Flanders, of Boston; vi. Maria, born August 17, 1846, married Sep- tember 12, 1866, Samuel Logan, and has a son, Dr. Charles Logan, who married Jennie Farnsworth, of Vermont; Maria married sec- ond, Sumner L. Warner, of Dexter, Maine ; vii. John, born 1852, died July 5, 1865; viii. Edward, born May 16, 1854, married Eva Cox, of Montville, and had two sons: Cas- sius S. and Stanley. 4. John, married Elsie Gilbreth, of Belfast; children: i. Alice, mar- ried William Card, died at age thirty years:
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