USA > Maine > Genealogical and family history of the state of Maine, Volume IV > Part 69
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).
Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10 | Part 11 | Part 12 | Part 13 | Part 14 | Part 15 | Part 16 | Part 17 | Part 18 | Part 19 | Part 20 | Part 21 | Part 22 | Part 23 | Part 24 | Part 25 | Part 26 | Part 27 | Part 28 | Part 29 | Part 30 | Part 31 | Part 32 | Part 33 | Part 34 | Part 35 | Part 36 | Part 37 | Part 38 | Part 39 | Part 40 | Part 41 | Part 42 | Part 43 | Part 44 | Part 45 | Part 46 | Part 47 | Part 48 | Part 49 | Part 50 | Part 51 | Part 52 | Part 53 | Part 54 | Part 55 | Part 56 | Part 57 | Part 58 | Part 59 | Part 60 | Part 61 | Part 62 | Part 63 | Part 64 | Part 65 | Part 66 | Part 67 | Part 68 | Part 69 | Part 70 | Part 71 | Part 72 | Part 73 | Part 74 | Part 75 | Part 76 | Part 77 | Part 78 | Part 79 | Part 80 | Part 81 | Part 82 | Part 83 | Part 84 | Part 85 | Part 86 | Part 87 | Part 88 | Part 89 | Part 90 | Part 91 | Part 92 | Part 93 | Part 94 | Part 95 | Part 96 | Part 97 | Part 98 | Part 99 | Part 100 | Part 101 | Part 102 | Part 103 | Part 104 | Part 105 | Part 106 | Part 107 | Part 108 | Part 109 | Part 110 | Part 111 | Part 112 | Part 113 | Part 114 | Part 115 | Part 116 | Part 117 | Part 118 | Part 119 | Part 120 | Part 121
The counties of Waterford, PHELAN Queens and Limerick, Ireland, counties almost contiguous and all in the southern portion of the island, have given to America statesmen and clergymen of renown. From county Queens we have had James Phelan (1821-1873), confederate states senator, whose grandfather was Dennis Phelan, who came from Maryborough, Ire- land, to New York, in 1796, resided in New Jersey, Virginia and Alabama, and settled in Huntsville, Alabama, where his son John mar- ried Priscilla Oakes (Ford) Morris, and where their son James, the senator, married Eliza Jones, daughter of Dr. Alfred and Eliza (Jones) Moore, of Madison county, Alabama. He was lawyer, state senator, confederate state senator and judge advocate of Alabama, and his son James (1856-1891) was a repre- sentative for Tennessee in the United States congress, 1887-91, of Alabama. From county Limerick came the Rt. Rev. Richard Phelan, born in Tralee, January 1, 1828, ordained priest May 4, 1854, in Pittsburg, Pennsylvania, coadjutant bishop of the sees of Pittsburg and Allegheny with right of succession in 1885,
and consecrated titular bishop of Cibyra, Au- gust 2, 1885, and on the death of Bishop Trigg, December 7, 1889, became his suc- cessor.
(I) From county Waterford we find the name of William Phelan (1730-1802), who married Mary Keerwan, was a farmer and had sons : John, Patrick, Richard and William (q. v.).
(II) William (2), son of William (I) and Mary (Keerwan) Phelan, was born in county Waterford, Ireland, in 1802, and was brought up as a farmer. He married Mary, daughter of Philip Coffee; seven children, all born in county Waterford, and baptized in the parish church: Margaret, John, Richard William, Alice, Katherine, Patrick and Thomas. Of these children Richard William and Thomas were the only ones to come to America. The father was an industrious man, beloved by his neighbors, and he died highly respected in the ancestral home in county Waterford in 1894, succeeded by children and grandchildren.
(III) Richard William, son of William (2) and Mary (Coffee) Phelan, was born in the family homestead in county Waterford, Ire- land, March 13, 1855. He was brought up on his father's farm, and like his father was in- dustrious and frugal. He was educated in the parish school, and his parents having shown a great desire that he should study for the priesthood, he bent his course of study to that end under the direction of the parish priest, who advised him to prepare for matriculation at St. Patrick's College, Carlow, and was grad- uated in philanthropy and ethics with excel- lent standing in the class of 1874, and after making his theological course at St. Patrick's he received ordination in June, 1879. He was induced to make America the field of his work in the priesthood, and was sent to Manchester, New Hampshire, as assistant to the Rev. Father McDonald, pastor of St. Anne's Church, where he served 1881-82. From this parish he went to St. Gabriel's Church, Win- terport, Maine, as pastor, and here he did much to build up a rather weak parish and to enthuse the Catholic community with new zeal. He served this parish 1883-88, and was next pastor of St. David's Church, Rockland, Maine. He had hardly become acquainted with the people of this parish when the church was destroyed by fire. In rebuilding he se- cured the permission from the bishop to re- name the parish St. Bernard, and a beautiful new edifice soon took the place of the ashes of the old building, and the people came for miles around to aid him, and the parish expanded
2006
STATE OF MAINE.
and many schools accessory to the new church were established and the education of the chil- dren and the care of the poor and afflicted was his incessant delight. He established and had charge of museums at Hurricane Island and Vinal Haven, and accepted the chaplaincy of the State Penitentiary at Thomaston, in order to better help in his work of saving souls. In 1907 he was removed to Bath, Maine, and was given charge of St. Mary's Church in that city, where he found a larger field still for his indominable spirit of service and helpfulness. No communion in Maine has shown so great advancement in growth and prosperity as that of the Roman Catholic church, and the mis- sionary work of the clergyman of the church extends far beyond the confines of the several parishes and new churches are demanded con- stantly to provide for the overflow from the outlying districts that were crowding the mother churches.
JOSCELYN The surname Joscelyn is variously spelled both in
England and America. The Joslin family of Massachusetts is of the same stock as the English Joscelyns. The history of the family extends back to the time of the Norman Conquest in 1066, in England, and much further than that in Normandy, whence came the progenitor, Sir Gilbert Joscelyne, with Duke William. A daughter of Emperor Charlemagne married Count Jocelyne, whose . pedigree is known for some generations earlier. Egidius Josceline, son of Gilbert, was given large estates in England after the Nor- man Conquest, and it is believed by genealo- gists that all the old English families of Josce- lyn and Joslin are descended from Sir Gilbert Joscelyn, of the Conqueror's army. The fam- ily possessed the lordships of Sempringham and Tyrington. Gilbert Joscelyn, son of Sir Gilbert, devoted himself to the Roman Catholic religion, and founded the order of priesthood called the Gilbertines, and was canonized as a saint by Pope Innocent III, in 1202. The younger son, Thomas Joscelyn, married Maude, daughter of John Hyde, of Hyde Hall, and his heiress. She was also granddaughter of Baron Sudeley, and by this marriage a large estate, which is still owned by the Joscelyns, came into the family. One of this stock mar- ried Anne, heiress of the Percys, who became Duke of Northumberland; another was a signer of the Magna Charta; another is the present Earl of Roden. The family has had many distinguished members in both England
and America. There are several coats-of-arms. That of the Cornwall family at Mount Trega- menian, is: Azure three escalops or. In Es- sex county the family bears: Chequy gules and azure on a fesse of the first an annulet or. Another: Gules three escarbuncles argent.
(I) David Joscelyn, immigrant ancestor, ws born in England, and settled in Virginia after the Revolution. He married Snell. Children : Daniel J. P., George, David, Hiram.
(II) Daniel J. P., son of David Joscelyn, was born in Virginia, in 1803, and died in 1884. He married Charity Hitt. He removed to New York City. Children: William J., mentioned below ; Nellie, Mary, Cornelia, Bet- sey.
(III) William J., son of Daniel J. P. Josce- lyn, was born in New York City, in 1837. He was educated in the public schools of his na- tive city and at Harvard College. He taught school in New York state for a time, and afterward engaged in the lumber business in northern New York, and did a large business during all the rest of his life until he retired. In politics he is a Republican; in religion"a Methodist. He married, in 1861, Mary Owens, born in New York City. Children: Robert Nelson, mentioned below; Jonas, Walter, Ed- win, Lillian, James, died aged five years.
(IV) Robert Nelson, son of William J. Joscelyn, was born in New York City, May 26, 1864. He received his early education in the public schools of his native city. He be- gan the study of law in Columbia Law School, but afterward left the law to study divinity at the Minnesota School of Theology, where he graduated. He was ordained in the Methodist Episcopal Church, and preached in Minnesota in various towns for fourteen years. At Al- bert Lea, Minnesota, he founded, owned and edited the Evening Tribune, a daily newspaper. He was chaplain of the state senate two years. In Minnesota the chaplaincy is an elective office, and has the same salary as senators. From Minnesota Mr. Joscelyn removed to Delaware, and after two years there to Gardi- ner, Maine, and thence in 1905 to Biddeford, where he has been pastor of the Methodist Episcopal Church to the present time. He is a member of the lodge of Odd Fellows of Mor- ton, Minnesota. He married, October 29, 1888, Anna Luella, daughter of William Ham- mill, of Wisconsin. Children: I. Wilhelmina E., born September 17, 1890. 2. Flora Lucile, born October 26, 1894, at Wells, Minnesota. 3. Myrtle Phillips, born January 10, 1897, at
2007
STATE OF MAINE.
St. Peter's, Minnesota. 4. William J., born April 25, 1899, at Albert Lea, Minnesota. 5. Priscilla G., born June 12, 1903, at Gardiner, Maine.
(For ancestry see Reynolds, p. 1208.)
(V) Nathaniel (4), young- REYNOLDS er son of Nathaniel (3) and Mary ( Snell ) Reynolds (see page 1208), was born in Bridgewater, about 1716-17, and settled in North Bridge- water. He married (first) in 1739, Hannah, daughter of Samuel Hartwell, who died, leav- ing two sons (Philip, born 1740, Jonas 1742). His second wife was Mary Tolman, of Bridge- water. They had eight children, and it is stated that the father moved from Bridgewa- ter to Vassalboro, Maine, with the five young- est (presumably after the death of his second wife). Children by second marriage: Tim- othy, born 1746; Hannah, 1750, married, 1769, William Packard; Mary, 1754, married Dea- con Henry Packard, 1774; Nathaniel, 1757, married Bethia, daughter of Levi Keith, 1777; David, 1759; Silane, 1760; Jonathan, 1764, married 1794, Anna Thayer ; Cynthia, 1769.
(VI) Jonathan, fourth son of Nathaniel (4) and Mary (Tolman) Reynolds, was born in Bridgewater, in 1764. He married, 1794, Anna, daughter of Jeremiah and Tabitha (Leavitt) Thayer, born in 1769. They moved to Sidney, Maine. There is no definite record of their family, but probably the following data refers to their son and his descendants. It is believed that they also had a son Adua, and probably other children.
(VII) Leavitt (probably) son of Jonathan and Anna (Thayer) Reynolds, was born in Sidney, Maine, about 1798, and married Ex- perience Spaulding; they settled in Winslow, Maine. He was a lumberman, and in politics a Republican. Their children were: Thomas, Adua, Vose, Timothy, Solomon Eaton, Leav- itt, Susan, Aclisa, Ann, Mary J., Abbie and Betsey. It is stated that this line had Rey- nolds relatives in Augusta, Sidney, Vassalboro and Bangor, the Maine branch of the family being described as "of medium height, mus- cular, full of energy and pluck and very tena- cious." The evidence that the above Leavitt Reynolds was son of Jonathan of the sixth generation seems conclusive, as Jonathan's wife's mother (and grandmother of his chil- dren) was a Leavitt, the name appearing in no other of the family lines.
(VIII) Thomas, eldest son of Leavitt and Experience (Spaulding) Reynolds, was born in Sidney, or Winslow, Maine. He married
Naomi Newell, born in Waterville, Maine, daughter of Moses Nelson, of Palermo, Waldo county, whose father, an Englishman, was a proprietor of the town. The wife of Moses was an Abbott, born in China, Maine, of the Hartford, Connecticut, Abbotts. Thomas Rey- nolds followed his father in business and poli- tics. He was also trustee of the Methodist church at Winslow.
(IX) Charles, son of Thomas and Naomi N. (Nelson) Reynolds, was born at Winslow, Maine, July 10, 1849. He was educated at the town school at Winslow, high school and Oak Grove Seminary, Vassalboro; graduate of Dwight's Business College, Augusta; Maine Wesleyan Seminary and Female College, Kent's Hill, and of Wesleyan University, Mid- dletown, Connecticut, class of 1882. He mar- ried Abbie A., daughter of Asa Crowell, of Winslow; children: I. Ethel, graduate of Middletown high school, Hackettstown, New Jersey Institute, Wesleyan University ; teacher at Beverly, Massachusetts. 2. Mabel Naomi, married William M. Phillips, April 8, 1908. 3. Carl Thomas, for nineteen years he was a bookseller at Middletown, and for six years connected with the Columbia Trust Company. He is now with the firm of A. H. Bickmore & Company, private bankers, 30 Pine street, New York City. In politics, Mr. Reynolds is Re- publican ; has twice been a member of the com- mon council, and was president and vice-presi- dent of the Y. M. C. A. for fifteen years, also trustee Middletown Savings Bank, and a mem- ber of the following societies: Blue Lodge, North Vassalboro, No. 53; Washington Chap- ter, No. 6, R. A. M., Middletown, Connecti- cut; Cyrene Commandery, No. 8, Middle- town; Sphinx Temple, A. A. O. N. M. S., Hartford, Connecticut; I. N. O., Wesleyan University; Mystic Seven, class society ; also Maine Society of New York.
The Scottish element in GREENLAW American history has fur- nished a theme for many deeds of valor on the battlefield, and its sons have gone down to patriotic graves. It has produced great divines and educators. The halls of congress have rung with Scottish elo- quence, and several of our presidents have been of this descent, notably the unyielding Grant and the gentle Mckinley. Even in the humbler walks of life Scotch tenacity and per- severance have counted for much in developing the natural resources of the country. The state of Maine has its share of the triumphant race, and the Greenlaw family is a good ex-
2008
STATE OF MAINE.
ample of what Scotch energy and thrift coupled with opportunities will accomplish in a state of such diversified resources and broad opportunities.
(I) James Greenlaw was born in Scotland, and married Elizabeth Adams, of Staten Is- land, New York. He lived in Deer Isle, New Brunswick, and his son was him whom we will next describe.
(II) George Albert, son of James and Eliz- abeth (Adams) Greenlaw, was born in Deer Isle, March 15, 1847, and removed to, East- port, the frontier city of Maine. He married Maria, daughter of Robert and Jane Spear, of Eastport. She was born April 18, 1848. Jane Spear was a Morrison before marriage, and her mother was Mary Sinclair, also of Scot- land, niece of Sir Charles Sinclair, of the Brit- ish navy. Robert Spear was an authority on Eastport local history, and rescued from ob- livion much that was of value to the historical student. Children of George A. and Maria (Spear) Greenlaw were: Robert Armstrong, George Henry, Albert and Walter Armstrong, United States meat inspector of Portland, Maine.
(III) Hon. Albert, third son of George Al- bert and Maria (Spear) Greenlaw, was born in Eastport, July 3, 1874, and was taught the rudimentary branches in the city schools. He was elected alderman of the city of Eastport in 1899 and re-elected up to 1904. In 1905 he was elected mayor of the city, the youngest man to hold that office in the state of Maine, and was re-elected in 1906. So efficient and ca- pable was his administration of the affairs of the city that a third nomination was urged upon him, but he emphatically declined. Mayor Greenlaw is a member of the county and city committee of the Republican party, and chair- man of both, and an astute politician. He is a member of the board of trade, and has been a delegate from the local organization to the state board of trade for several years. He is engaged in the wholesale and retail fish trade, doing a very large business. Mayor Green- law's fraternal relations include membership in the Eastern Lodge, No. 7, Ancient Free and Accepted Masons, of Eastport; in the Chap- ter, Border Lodge, No. 81, Independent Or- der of Odd Fellows, of which he is past grand ; Moose Island Encampment; Passamaquody Lodge, No. 23, Improved Order of Red Men, of which he is past sachem, and the Patrons of Husbandry. He is captain of Company I, Sec- ond Regiment, Maine State National Guard. He attends the Unitarian church.
Joshua Witham, the first of the WITHAM name of whom we have infor- mation, was a very industrious and faithful man, and became a lay preacher in his last days. By his first wife he had chil- dren : James, Cyrus, Lovinia and David. His second wife was Polly (Courson) Witham and his children were: Josiah, Benjamin F., Asaph H. and Martha.
(II) Josiah, son of Joshua Witham, was born in 1798, his birthplace probably being Lisbon, Maine, and he died in 1861. He was educated in the schools of Lisbon, and learned his trade of carriagesmith and blacksmith in that town.
(II) Asaph H., son of Joshua Witham, was born in Lisbon, February 13, 1833, and though a very quiet man, had a strong influence for good in his native town. He enlisted February IO, 1862, in Company H., Tenth Maine Vol- unteers and was discharged February 5, 1863, for disability. He was at the front in three battles, Antietam, Cedar Mountain and Sec- ond Bull Run. He died in Portland, February 5, 1908. He married Doranna Brooks, daugh- ter of William Brooks, of Woodstock, Maine. Their children were. Alphonso Nelson, Lydia M., deceased; John, deceased; a child that died in infancy ; Lester A., deceased; Adelbert E., and Agnes D., who resides in Portland, Maine.
(III) Alphonso Nelson, son of Asaph H. and Doranna (Brooks) Witham, was born in Woodstock, Maine, November 6, 1857, and is a very successful physician at Westbrook, Maine. He was educated in the Maine schools of Lisbon and Harrison, and a graduate of Bridgton Academy, 1880. He also took a post graduate course at North Bridgton, stud- ied for a year in the Maine Medical School, and received his degree of M. D. from the University of Vermont in 1885. He located at Swan's Island, Maine, and in 1887 removed to North Windham, and located at Westbrook in 1895. He is a member of the Maine Med- ical Association, of the American Medical As- sociation, of the Cumberland County Medical Society, the Maine Academy of Medicine and Science, and is president of the Westbrook Medical Club. He has several times refused the important position of city physician, and has never felt like accepting any positions ex- cept those offered him on school boards. He has been a very efficient member of the West- brook school board for several years, and be- fore that held the same position for six years on the Windham school board. In politics he
う
2009
STATE OF MAINE.
is a Prohibitionist. He is a member and past master of the Presumpscot Lodge, F. and A. M., Windham ; of the Westbrook Chapter and Council; and also of the Saint Alban Com- mandery of Portland. He is a member of the Universalist church, and for some time was a very efficient trustee of that religious body. He married, December 27, 1879, Mary L. Pen- nell, born in Gray, Maine, November 23, 1857. She is a noble woman, and a very enthusiastic worker in the Universalist church, being its treasurer and clerk, and holding other offices. She is the daughter of Albert Pennell, who was born at Baily Island, Maine, May 15, 1827, and was for many years a very success- ful carpenter at Gray. He married (first) Èl- vira Allen and (second) Sarah Leslie. His six children were all born of the first marriage. Mrs. Witham's family line is a fine one: (I) Ancestor Philip Penniel, of the Isle of Jersey ; (II) Thomas Pennell, of Gloucester, Massa- chusetts, who married Sarah Durin; (III) Clement Pennell, born at Gloucester, Massa- chusetts, in 1723, and died before 1791, hav- ing married Rachel Riggs; (IV) Joseph Pen- nell, who resided in Gray, and married Emma Nash and Hannah Ward; (V) Thomas Jef- ferson Pennell, born in Gray, January 25, 1803, died in Harpswell, August 22, 1854, having married Susan Alexander, of Harps- well; (VI) Albert Pennell. the father of Mrs. Witham (see Pennell). The chil- dren of Dr. Alphonso Nelson Witham and his wife are: I. Ernest Clair. 2. Vyra May, born on Swan's Island, March 21, 1886, and now resides at home. 3. Philip Asaph, born at Windham, and died at the age of two years and seven months. 4. Burton Brooks, born at Westbrook.
(IV) Ernest Clair, son of Dr. Alphonso Nelson and Mary L. (Pennell) Witham, was born in Gray, October 6, 1880. He was edu- cated in the schools of Windham and West- brook, graduating at Westbrook Seminary in 1900, and he received his B. S. degree from Tufts College in 1904. He now resides at South Boston, Massachusetts, where he has for some time been principal of the Perkins Institution for the Blind. For one year he was principal of the Windham, Maine, high school, after which he removed to Hudson, Massachusetts, where he was sub master and teacher of science in the high school. The following year he was chosen sub master and teacher of science in Boston in the Perkins Institution for the Blind, of which he was elected principal January 1, 1907. In politics he is a sturdy Republican. He is a member of
the Warren Philip Masonic Lodge, No. 186, of Westbrook, and also a member of the Theta Delta Chi fraternity of Tufts College. He is a Universalist. He is the author of several books and papers on science and instruction of the blind. He married, December 24, 1908, Lillian E. Davis, of Westbrook, a trained nurse, daughter of Albert Davis, of West- brook.
KINCAID All the members of the Kin- caid family in the old Pine Tree State trace their ancestry to the best stock of Scotland, and hence their helpfulness in all the communities where they have lived is at once assured. The ancestor of the first Kincaid family in Maine was Patrick, born in Edinboro, Scotland, about 1747, ac- cording to the best traditions preserved by the descendants. He came to America quite early in life and soon settled at Brunswick, Maine, where he died December 25, 1821, aged sev- enty-four years. His family was one of much worth in Scotland, and his brother, John Al- bion Kincaid, became a prominent lawyer. The ancestor at Brunswick was a man of great force of character and soon acquired a large tract of land, which he cultivated in a suc- cessful manner. He was a very religious man, and à deacon in the First Parish Church at Brunswick. He was thus a splendid type of the other Maine settlers who have borne the Kincaid name. He married Mary Stanwood, of one of Brunswick's leading families, and his sons were men of great enterprise and worth. Many of the descendants of this Kincaid fam- ily are widely scattered over other states, Wil- liam Kincaid, of Bradford, Pennsylvania, be- ing one of the most successful business men of that city, and having also had fine records for his enterprising work in Kansas and else- where. In some of the western states the towns owe much to the early coming thither of members of the Kincaid family from Maine, for though they have often found that the de- scriptions of new states did not correspond with the conditions which really existed there, they have "made the best of it with genuine Scotch grit," and helped all that they could in the de- velopment of the towns where they had made. their home. They have also always had a keen interest in educational affairs. It will thus be seen that the Kincaids of Maine bear the same striking family characteristics of sturdy faith, work of a worthy type, and a keen looking abroad to see what openings for service may lie in other parts of the land.
(I) John Kincaid, of one of the strong old
2010
STATE OF MAINE.
families of that name in Scotland, removed to Carolina, Kings county, New Brunswick, about the year 1818. He was a man of sturdy and resolute character, and although he did not find things in the "new country" just as they had been pictured to him in the descriptions and letters which had "won him to America," he set himself resolutely to work on the farm, and continued in this line of service all his life. His untiring industry, his resolve to make the best of things, and his faithful chris- tian life, were of great help in the community where he settled. He married Margaret Arm- strong. Children : John, James, Thomas, Elizabeth and Anna.
(II) Thomas, son of John and Margaret (Armstrong) Kincaid, was born in Carolina, Kings county, New Brunswick, in 1833, and died in 1889. He was always much inter- ested in farming, but quite early in life learned the trade of a blacksmith, in which work he was very successful. He worked at several places in the British Provinces, lived for a while in Boston, Massachusetts, and finally made his home in the beautiful city of Fred- erickton, New Brunswick. He married Mary, daughter of Abraham Johnson; she was a woman of great strength of character. Chil- dren : Robert John and Mrs. Cliff Somer- ville.
(III) Robert John, son of Thomas and Mary (Johnson) Kincaid, was born at Caro- lina, Kings county, New Brunswick, April 18, 1863, and has for some time been a very suc- cessful physician and surgeon at Mars Hill, Aroostook county, Maine. He studied very diligently in the schools of his native town, and in the University of New Brunswick at Frederickton, and spent three years in McGill University of Montreal, Canada. He also con- tinued his education for one year in Bowdoin College at Brunswick, Maine. Not satisfied even with this varied and fine training for his life work he spent one year of very faithful and exacting work in the Bellevue Medical College of New York City. He then turned to the old Pine Tree State and settled in the town of Mars Hill, where he has followed his profession with much energy and skill, dis- playing in marked degree the sturdy charac- teristics of his Scottish ancestors. He is a member of the Aroostook County (Maine) Medical Association, and an active member in the Century Lodge, No. 100, Knights of Pythias, of Mars Hill. He married (first) Serena Cliff and (second) Winnie, daughter of W. L. Boynton. Children: Otis by first wife, and Ruth by second wife.
Need help finding more records? Try our genealogical records directory which has more than 1 million sources to help you more easily locate the available records.