Genealogical and family history of the state of Maine, Volume II, Part 44

Author: Little, George Thomas, 1857-1915, ed; Burrage, Henry S. (Henry Sweetser), 1837-1926; Stubbs, Albert Roscoe
Publication date: 1909
Publisher: New York, Lewis historical Pub. Co.
Number of Pages: 736


USA > Maine > Genealogical and family history of the state of Maine, Volume II > Part 44


Note: The text from this book was generated using artificial intelligence so there may be some errors. The full pages can be found on Archive.org (link on the Part 1 page).


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Captain Thompson married, in June, 1821, Matilda Smith, born 1796, died November I, 1877, daughter of Captain Robert Smith. Chil- dren : I. Horace, born November 15, 1822, mentioned below. 2. William J., lost at sea at the age of eighteen. 3. Lydia Jane, born October 26, 1825, died at the age of nine. 4. Mary Elizabeth, born December, 1828, died November 5, 1895. 5. Robert, born July 8, 1830, died January 28, 1871. 6. Francis, born April 27, 1834, died March II, 1872. He and his family attended the Baptist church.


(VIII) Horace, son of Benjamin (4) Thompson, was born at Kennebunkport, Maine, November 15, 1822. He was educated in the common schools of his native town and at the Kennebunk Academy. During his youth he worked on his father's farm. In 1848 he began his career as clerk in a general store in Kennebunk, and after three years in that po- sition established a boot and shoe store at Saco. He sold his business after a few years,


and in 1871 succeeded to the homestead which he conducted until 1903, when he sold it, re- moving to his present home in Saco, where he has since lived a retired life. From 1871 to 1891 he was also in the employ of the P. S. & P. railroad. In politics he is a Republican. He is an attendant of the Baptist church. He is well known and greatly esteemed by his


townsmen. IIe married, December, 1853, Elizabeth T. Allen, born April 19, 1834, daugh- ter of Jacob and Joanna Allen, of Turner, Maine. Children : I. Elizabeth A., born Sep- tember, 1854, died January 9, 1904; married William Stackpole; children : i. Fred H. Stack- pole, born April 23, 1876; ii. William H. Stackpole, October 29, 1879. 2. Adeline Ma- tilda, born June .26, 1856.


Denmark has loaned to the THOMPSON western states many valu- able citizens. To Maine she gave this branch of the Thompson family, whose biography follows in detail below.


(I) John Lorenzo Thompson was born at Elsonore, Denmark, November 14, 1812, the town in which Shakespeare located the vision- ary Hamlet, died October 5, 1908. At fifteen years of age he began to sail the Baltic sea as a cabin boy. On one of these vessels he was put in irons for striking an officer who had struck a man with his arm in a sling. At St. Petersburg the Danish consul interceded in behalf of John L., as a result of which he was released and put on board of an American vessel. The sailor lad supposed that he was to be taken home to Denmark; instead he was landed at Boston, Massachusetts, where he first began life in America. At the age of fifteen he sailed from Boston, New York, and other ports all over the world. He followed the sea for twenty-five years, first as seaman, then as mate, and finally master of a vessel. Retiring from the sea in 1852, he learned the sailmaker's trade at Bath, Maine, where he continued to reside, being at the time of his death the oldest citizen of that city. He re- tired from business in 1888. He married Lucy D. Sayward, in 1841. Children: James Lu- ther, Jane M., who resides in Cambridgeport, Massachusetts ; Fred L., Samuel D., who lives in Bath ; Charles S., also of Bath ; Frank N., George E., Levi T. and Elmer. The follow- ing is the line of Lucy D. Sayward :


(I) Henry Sayward was born in England, and came to America in 1637. He resided in Hampton and Portsmouth, New Hampshire, and in York, Maine, where he died in 1679.


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His wife Mary died at York before 1689. Children : John, Jonathan, Hannah, Mary, Sarah and James.


(II) John, son of Henry and Mary Say- ward, was born probably about 1657, while his father was residing at Strawberry Bank, as Portsmouth was then called. The earliest record of him is to be found in the records of York, Maine, June 26, 1679, when the town granted him a "lott of land near about the folly." May 1, 1685, the town granted him the "remainder of the ox pasture." He was a millwright and carpenter, owning one-fourth of the sawmill at Cape Neddick, Maine. He took the oath of allegiance at a town meet- ing in York, March 22, 1680, was a grand juryman in 1684, and was one of the select- men of York in 1685. He married Mary, daughter of Edward Richworth, of York, about 16So. Edward Richworth was a very prominent man in Maine.


(III) John (2), only son of John (1) and Mary (Richworth) Sayward, was born Jan- uary 2, 1693. was a millwright and carpenter, and owned part of the sawmill at Cape Ned- dick, called "Cape Neddick Old Mill." He was a grand juror in 1712 and 1714, was on the committee to examine the selectmen's accounts in 1716, constable in 1717, highway surveyor in 1718; in 1719 he with John Wheelwright and others were commissioners for York county to regulate the tax lists and valuations, and in 1722 he was captain of a military com- pany. In the Massachusetts Historical Col- lections is this item: "February, 1722, Cap- tain Sayward, with a company of volunteers, went as far as the White Hills, a hundred miles into the enemy's country in pursuit of the Indians." In 1731 he was lieutenant of a military company, in 1737 was moderator, se- lectman and assessor, and was selectman in 1736-37-39. His will, dated February 8, 1742, is as follows: "In the name of God, Amen. I, John Sayward, of York, in the County of York, Gent., being at this time under weak- ness of Body, but of perfect mind and memory & understanding, for which Praised be Al- mighty God, and considering the certainty of death & ye uncertainty of time Do, in the fear of God, whose I am & whom I endeavor to serve, make this my last will & Testament. And principally & first of all. I resign my Soul unto my Redeemer, the Lord Jesus Christ, who, I trust, has redeemed it by his Blood & in & through whom alone & his glorious merit & Redemption I humbly hope for Eternal happi- ness & Salvation.


'And my Body I committ to the Earth to be


buried in a Christian like Grave & Decent man- ner at the Discretion of my executors here- after named, nothing doubting but at the gen- eral Resurrection I shall receive the same again by the Mighty Power of God & in hope of a joy full resurrection to everlasting felicity & happiness and as for such Worldly Estate as God in his infinite mercy has bestowed upon me in this Life." ( The above was followed by bequests.) The baptismal name of his wife was Mary.


(IV) Ebenezer, third son of John (2) and Mary Sayward, was born September 10, 1727, and lived in York, Maine. He was a hus- bandman, in 1757 was a constable, was field driver in 1753, grand juryman in 1768, petit juror and highway surveyor in 1772-79-81. He died at York, April, 1783, and his will, dated March 30, 1782, was proved April 21, 1783. He married Mary, daughter of Captain Thomas Bragdon, of York, November 16, 1749, who died January 13, 1781. Children : John, Theodore, Hannah, Benjamin Trafton, Jonathan, Mary, Henry, Ebenezer, Mercy and Samtiel.


(V) Theodore, second son of Ebenezer and Mary (Bragdon) Sayward, was born Feb- ruary 4, 1753, and was a mariner. He owned "a house and land adjoining the county road leading to the great bridge over the York river," which he purchased of Cotton Brad- bury, May 1, 1781. In about 1783 he moved to Georgetown, Maine. He was lost at sea in 1800. He married Lucy Donnell, of York, Maine, February 25, 1775, who died at Bath, Maine, in 1820. Children : Theodore, James, who was lost at sea ; Lucy, Mary, Luther, who died in Cuba ; Abby, Sarah, Susan, Samuel and Hannah.


(VI) Samuel, ninth child and fourth son of Theodore and Lucy (Donnell) Sayward, was born in York, Maine, in 1790. He was a building contractor and ship joiner, went to St. John, New Brunswick, where he carried on an extensive business and accumulated a large property. This he lost by the failure of the man with whom he was connected finan- cially. He married Jane Traverse, of St. John, New Brunswick, in 1812; she died in July, 1834, and he died at St. John, May, 1835. Children : James, Elizabeth, Samuel Luther and Lucy Donnell, who became the wife of Jolın L. Thompson, as before related.


(II) Frank Nelson, sixth child and fourth son of John L. and Lucy D. (Sayward) Thompson, was born in Bath, July 20, 1856, educated in the public schools, and started out early in life as a watchmaker and later en-


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tered the clothing business. He married Effie A., daughter of Silas Hodgdon, of Boothbay, Maine, in 1884. Children : Fred H. and Ev- elyn R.


(II) George E., seventh child and sixth son of John L. and Lucy D. (Sayward) Thomp- son, was born in Bath, Maine, September 3, 1859. and educated in the city schools. At an early age he entered a clothing store as clerk. In 1888, in connection with his brother Frank N .. he established the clothing business in Bath, which they now own and which has become a very flourishing establishment. They carry as large a stock and as fine a grade of goods as any like concern in the state. The store in which they do business is very finely fitted up and the equal of any. He has for six years been treasurer of a fund left to the city of Bath by the late John R. Kelly to re- lieve the needy poor. This fund has through wise investment increased to a large sum, and through Mr. Thompson's careful administra- tion thereof it has done a great deal of good. He is a member of the Knights of Pythias. and married Lizzie, daughter of David P. Low, January 1, 1888. Children : Ruth Elizabeth, a graduate of Wellesley College: Earl Spauld- ing, Harold Low and Donald Sayward. Mr. Thompson is a man of pleasing personality and has many friends.


THOMPSON Joseph Thompson was born in Yorkshire, England. He married Martha Turner, born in Malton, England. They had children : Samuel, mentioned below; Joseph, William, Jane, John.


(II) Samuel, son of Joseph Thompson, born in Halifax, Yorkshire, England, 1835, died there in 1899. He had limited opportunities for education, and began to work early in life. He was a stuff presser in the cloth in- dustry in England, and worked at that trade all his life, being active up to the time of his death. He was a Conservative in politics. He married Mary Ann Green, horn in Halifax, Yorkshire, England, in 1856. Children: Em- ily, Joseph, mentioned below; Mary Ann, Clara.


(III) Joseph, son of Samuel Thompson, was born in Halifax, Yorkshire, England, February 2, 1858. He was educated in pri- vate schools and in the national schools of his native town. He served an apprenticeship of seven years and a half at his trade of press- man in the dyeing and finishing mills. After following his trade in England for fourteen


years, he came to America in 1885 and lo- cated first at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, where he found employment in the Quaker City dye works, owned by Thomas Dolan. A year later he removed to Saylesville, Rhode Island, where he worked in the mills as a journeyman for five years. He came to Sanford, Maine, in 1891, to work for the Goodalls in the San- ford Manufacturing Company and has re- mained with this concern to the present time. He is overseer of the finishing department. Mr. Thompson is well known in the industrial and textile industries of this section. He is a citizen of much influence and highly respected by his townsmen. In politics he is Repub- lican ; in religion an Episcopalian. He is prominent in the Masonic fraternity of Maine. He is a member of Preble Lodge of Free Ma- sons; White Rose Chapter, Royal Arch Ma- sons; and St. Amand Commandery, Knights Templar, of Kennebunk, Maine.


He married. 1878, Sophia, born Stockport, Cheshire, England, daughter of Henry Hud- son, of Stockport, Cheshire, England. Chil- dren: I. Sam Harry, born in England in 1879, married Alice Ashworth, and has one daughter, Lenora, born in 1902. 2. John Wil- lie, born in England, July 8, 1881. 3. Ernest, born in England, June 26, 1890, while his mother was there on a visit. 4. Clarence, born in Sanford, Maine, February 20, 1892.


Appleton Morgan, compiler of MORGAN an admirable genealogical work entitled "A History of the Family Morgan," states that "the word Mor-gan is a Cymric derivative, meaning one born by the sea, or a son of the sea (muir, sea ; gin, begotten)," and bases this etymology upon the following legend: King Arthur, a semi- mythical monarch who created the famous Knights of the Round Table, after being de- feated by another local potentate, found a safe refuge for his queen on the coast of what is now Glacorganshire. There she gave birth to their youngest son, who received the name of "Mor-gan-the man born by the sea ; whence Glamorgan-the country of the man born by the sea." The Welsh origin of the Morgans is indisputable, and the author of the above- mentioned work reckons himself to be the twenty-seventh generation in descent from the accepted progenitor of the family, Cadivor- fawr, a Welsh chieftain of the eleventh cen- tury, who died during the reign of William II ( 1087-1100). He also cites some evidence to show that the dramatist Shakespeare was re-


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lated to the Morgans. The American Mor- gans are descended from immigrants who came from Bristol, England.


(I) Richard Morgan arrived in New Eng- land from Wales in the middle of the seven- teenth century, locating first in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, and going from there to Do- ver, where he was residing in 1659. He sub- sequently settled in Brentwood, near Exeter, where there is a record of him in 1784, and a land conveyance from him to one Peter Coffin shows that he was living there in 1699. The maiden name of his wife is unknown, and ac- cording to the records he had but one son, John.


(II) John, son of Richard Morgan, married Mary Powell and had three sons, John, Simeon and another, who was drowned in childhood.


(III) John (2), eldest son of John (1) and Mary (Powell) Morgan, was born in Brent- wood and died in 1786. He married Abigail Gove, of Salisbury, Massachusetts, and was the father of Joanna, David, Parker, Judith, Eliza- beth and Abigail. The latter became the wife of Benjamin Smith, of Bridgewater, New Hampshire.


(IV) Parker, second son and third child of John (2) and Abigail (Gove) Morgan, was born in Brentwood, December 12, 1757. He learned the trades of a carpenter and cabinet- maker, serving his apprenticeship with Ebe- nezer Clifford in Kensington. In 1776, prior to his majority, he enlisted as a private for one year in Captain Winborn Adams' com- pany, Colonel Enoch Poore's regiment, New Hampshire Volunteers, and joining the conti- nental army saw considerable service in the revolutionary war, participating in the battle of Stillwater, October 7, 1777, which resulted in the total defeat of the British army under General Burgoyne. Having received his dis- charge from the army he served through one voyage on board the privateer "General Mif- flin," Captain Neal, which, while cruising in the Bay of Biscay, captured a British man-of- war. and sailing north as far as Greenland they captured thirteen prizes. The musket which he carried while in the continental army is now in the possession of his grandson, Eustis Parker Morgan, of Saco, and is highly prized as a relic. After his return he followed his trade in Kensington, Exeter, Portsmouth and elsewhere. In 1800 he settled in Gilman- ton, New Hampshire, where he resided for more than twenty years, and he died at Mere- dith Bridge (now Laconia), October 24, 1824. (N. B. The History of Gilmanton states that


Parker Morgan was a son of Simeon Morgan, who was drowned at Hampton Beach, when Parker was seven years old, 1764. This is contrary to the record contained in the Mor- gan Genealogy and is probably erroneous.) Parker Morgan was married June 7, 1781, to Betsey, daughter of Richard Sanborn, of Ken- sington, and her death occurred September 30, 1838. She bore him children: 1. John, born June 24, 1782, died September 12, 1795. 2. Jeremiah, April 16, 1784, died September 27. 1856. 3. Betsey, January 18, 1789, died Sep- tember 26, 1877. 4. Tappan, April 3, 1792, died in infancy. 5. Nancy, April 7, 1796, died April 24, 1824. 6. Charles, see succeeding paragraph. 7. Fanny, August 6, 1801. 8. John Tappan, January II, 1804, died April 10, 1845.


(V) Charles, fourth son and sixth child of Parker and Betsey (Sanborn) Morgan, was born at Gilmanton Iron Works. April 30, 1799. Having concluded his studies at the Gilmanton Academy he engaged in the manufacture of carriages and sleighs in connection with farm- ing, but subsequently learned the machinist's trade and followed it for some time in Man- chester, now Meredith Bridge. Removing to Laconia he and his business associates pur- chased a water privilege and engaged in the manufacture of machinery, erecting a shop for that purpose and carrying on business for a number of years. The plant was afterward transformed into a cotton mill, which was con- ducted by the Guilford Manufacturing Com- pany. During the construction of the Boston, Concord & Montreal railroad he acted as as- sistant engineer, surveying the line from Con- cord to Wells River, and he was also engaged in laying out public highways, private lands, etc. The latter years of his life were spent in Saco, Maine, and he died in that city, Decem- ber 16, 1882. In politics he was a Republican, joining that party at its formation and sup- porting it for the remainder of his life. His fraternal affiliations were with the Masonic order. He was a member of the Congrega- tional church. October 23, 1825, he married Sarah Ann, of Meredith, New Hampshire, daughter of Noah and Nancy Robinson. She was born October, 1806, died in Saco, 1890. Children : I. Amelia Frances, born May 13, 1826, died in infancy. 2. Eustis Parker, who will be again referred to. 3. Sarah Elizabeth, born February 17, 1830, married H. M. Good- rich, of Nashua, New Hampshire. 4. Charles Carroll, born July 25, 1832, began the practice of law in New York city and removed to Bos-


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ton. 5. Helen Frances, born June II, 1834, married Henry F. Aten, of Tacoma, Michi- gan ; died February 26, 1863.


(VI) Eustis Parker, second child and eld- est son of Charles and Sarah Ann (Robinson) Morgan, was born in Amoskeag, New Hamp- shire. April 12, 1828. He was educated in the public schools of Meredith, the Guilford Acad- emy and at the New Hampton Institute, where he pursued a special course in mathematics under Professor Knight. Through subsequent study and practical experience he became a mechanical engineer. In 1851 he accepted the position of mechanical engineer and draughts- man of the Saco Waterpower Company, of which S. J. Wetherell was then the agent, and in that responsible capacity was connected with this concern and its successors, the Saco and Pettee Machine Company, for fifty-three con- secutive years, retiring in 1902 on account of impaired healtlı. As an expert machinist and engineer he is widely and favorably known, and the present flourishing condition of the Saco and Pettee works is mainly the result of his energy and ability, he having devoted the best years of his life to the development of that plant. Politically he acts with the Re- publican party. He is a member of the Con- gregational church.


January 11, 1860, Mr. Morgan married (first) Clara Augusta, daughter of Enoch and Eliza Warren Lowell, of Saco; she died Jan- uary 11, 1860. He married (second), July 28, 1864, Lucy Augusta, daughter of James Madi- son and Charlotte Elizabeth (Noble) Deering, of Saco. Mrs. Morgan's great-grandfather, William Deering, born December 25, 1748, went from Blue Point, Scarboro, to Waterbor- ough about the year 1770, being the first to make a clearing on Deering Ridge, where he became an extensive farmer. His death oc- curred December 13, 1829. In 1773 he mar- ried Sarah Rumery, probably a daughter of Edward (I) Rumery, of Biddeford. Of this union there were four sons and three daugh- ters. William (2) Deering, Mrs. Morgan's grandfather, was born in Waterborough, March 24, 1776. He was a prominent farmer at Deering Ridge, occupying the homestead, and he died there February 7, 1860. He was married November 1, 1806, to Eunice Harper, and she died June 10, 1865. They were the parents of eight children : Orinda, James Madison, William H., Jonathan R., Eunice, Joseph G., David and Ezekiel. James Madi- son Deering, Mrs. Morgan's father, was born in Waterborough, July 23, 1809. At the age of nineteen he went to Saco, where he became


a successful merchant, and he retired from business in 1861. His death occurred in 1871. From 1838 to the time of his death he was a director of the York Bank. He served as chairman of both Republican committees; as county commissioner 1857 to 1863; as post- master from 1861 to 1866; city treasurer in 1867; mayor of Saco in 1868; and United States internal revenue inspector from 1869 to 1871. In 1867 he was appointed to investi- gate (with others) affairs at the State Insane Asylum at Augusta. In 1832 he married Charlotte Elizabeth, daughter of John and Elizabeth Noble, of Saco. Their children were: Captain John, died April, 1905; he was a shipmaster and lumber dealer in Port- land ; served twice as mayor of Portland, also collector of the port. Lucy Augusta, who be- came the second wife of Eustis P. Morgan as previously stated. George, died September, 1892; he was a soldier in the war of the re- bellion, captain of a company, was taken pris- oner and confined in Libby and Andersonville prisons for several months; he was also pay- master in the navy, which position he held to the time of his death. Mr. and Mrs. Morgan have had two children: Clara Augusta, born June 4, 1870, and Charles, born in 1876, died in infancy.


VOSE Robert Vose, immigrant ancestor, was born in county Lancaster, in Garston, near Liverpool, England, about 1599, and died in Milton, Massachusetts, October 16, 1683. He was son of Thomas and Anna Vose. In July, 1654, he purchased of the heirs of "Worshipful John Glover" one hundred and seventy-four acres of land in Dorchester, afterward Milton, on the easterly and southerly sides of "Cobert Baddocks Riv- er." Over this territory in subsequent years the descendants of Robert Vose were scattered along Canton avenue, in the vicinity of School street, on Gun Hill and Pleasant streets. A part of this land has remained in the family for two and a half centuries. Robert Vose was a man of note in his town. He was one of the three petitioners for the incorporation of Nilton. He gave to the town in 1664 eight acres of land for church purposes near Vose's lane and Center street, now occupied in part by the house of Mrs. Blanchard. He was active in church affairs. He lived in the old Glover house, near the junction of Canton avenue and Brook road. He married Jane , who died in October, 1675. Children : I. Edward, born 1636, died January 29, 1716. 2. Thomas, born about 1641, mentioned below.


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3. Elizabeth, married, December 9, 1657, Thomas Swift ; died without issue January 15, 1675. 4. Martha, married Lieutenant John Sharp, of Muddy Brook ( Brookline), who was killed by the Indians April 21, 1676, with Captain Wadsworth in the Sudbury fight ; mar- ried ( second ) Joseph Buckminster.


( II) Thomas, son of Robert Vose, was born about 1641 and died April 3, 1708. He was a man of more than ordinary standing in the town. For many years he was town clerk, and under his management the town records assumed a systematic and businesslike form. He was an officer in the French and Indian war and went on the expedition to Canada. He was representative to the general court. He married Waitstill Wyatt, who died January 8. 1727, aged eighty-four. Her mother, Mary Wyatt, was ninety-two years of age when she died, and the Dorchester town records say that "she was instrumental for the bringing into the world of one thousand one hundred and odd children." Children : 1. Elizabeth. 2. Henry, born April 9, 1663, mentioned below. 3. Jane. 4. Thomas, married Hannah


(III) Lieutenant Henry, son of Thomas Vose, was born April 9, 1663, died March 26, 1752, aged eighty-nine. He married Elizabeth Babcock, born October 24, 1666, died Novem- ber 18, 1732. Children : Waitstill, Robert, mentioned below; Mary, Elizabeth, Martha, Abigail, Hepzibah, Beulah, Thomas.


(IV) Lieutenant Robert (2), son of Lieu- tenant Henry Vose, was born October 25, 1693, died April 20, 1760. He married, Sep- tember 14, 1721, Abigail Sumner, born Jan- uary 31, 1699-1700, died December 20, 1769. Her brother, Seth Sumner, was great-grand- father of Hon. Charles Sumner, and of Gener- al Edwin Vose Sumner of the United States army. Robert Vose occupied the farm on the corner of Brush Hill road and Atherton street, Milton, which remained in the possession of the family until about 1880. His sons were remarkable for their height. Children: Oth- niel, Waitstill, Robert, Henry, Samuel, Will- iam, James, Elizabeth, Abigail, Thomas, men- tioned below ; Joshua, Benjamin.


(V) Thomas (2), son of Lieutenant Robert (2) Vose, was born February 8, 1740, in Mil- ton, died March 27, 1775. He married, De- cember 25, 1764, Mary Tucker, born May 22, 1745, died in Boston, March 17, 1831. Chil- dren : Thomas, mentioned below ; William, Peter Thatcher, Elisha, Joshua.




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