Genealogical and memorial history of the state of New Jersey, Volume II, Part 80

Author: Lee, Francis Bazley, 1869- ed
Publication date: 1910
Publisher: New York, N.Y. : Lewis Historical Publishing Co.
Number of Pages: 618


USA > New Jersey > Genealogical and memorial history of the state of New Jersey, Volume II > Part 80


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


brick one. Mark Reeve died about 1716 or 1717, leaving one son Joseph, referred to below.


(II) Joseph, only son of Mark and Ann (Hunt) Reeve, succeeded to his father's estates, In 1722 he married Elinor Bagnall, by whom he had five children: I. Mark, referred to below. 2. Joseph, born 7th month 5, 1725, died 1763 ; married Milicent, daughter of Jo- seph and Hannah Wade. His son, Samuel, married Ruth, daughter of Gideon and Julia Scull. 3. John, born Ist month 5, 1730, mar- ried (first) Elizabeth, daughter of John and Ann N. Brick, and (second) Jane West, of Woodbury, Gloucester county. He was one of the most prominent men of his community in his day. 4. Mary, born 1734; married Thomas Brown. 5. Benjamin, born 1737.


(III) Mark (2), son of Joseph and Elinor (Bagnall) Reeve, was born in Cumberland county, New Jersey, 12th month 28, 1723, and in early life became a highly esteemed minister among Friends. He purchased a large tract of land at Greenwich on Cohansey creek, situ- ated on the south side of the creek, where he erected a substantial brick building. About 1761 Mark Reeve married, and when he died he left five children: I. Ann. 2. George. 3. Josiah. " 4. Mark, Jr. 5. William, referred to below.


(IV) William, son of Mark (2) Reeve, was born at Greenwich, 12th month II, 1766, died 1823. After his marriage he and his wife re- moved from Cumberland county to Burling- ton county, and made his permanent home near where his brother Josiah had previously settled. He married Letitia, daughter of Josiah and Letitia Miller, of Mannington, by whom he had eight children: 1. Josiah Miller, married (first) Susannah H. Garrigues, (second) Mary B. Dallas. He several times represented his county in the state legislature. Was a prominent ship-builder, and one of the largest landholders in the county. 2. Anna, married William Hilliard, of Rancocas. 3. Elizabeth Miller, married Jesse Stanley. + Letitia Miller, died unmarried. 5. William Foster, re- ferred to below. 6. Mark Miller, died in South America ; was a prominent physician in Phila- delphia. 7. Priscilla, married Samuel C. Shep- ard. 8. Richard, never married. 9. Emmor, married (first) Prudence Cooper; (second) Sarah Wyatt Acton.


(V) William Foster, fifth child and second son of William and Letitia (Miller) Reeve. was born in Burlington county, New Jersey, in 1802. He is the only one of his father's three sons to remain at Alloways Town, a place


818


STATE OF NEW JERSEY.


they did so much to improve. With his two brothers, Josiah Miller and Emmor, he car- ried on with great success for a number of years the ship building business started at Alloways Town. They did not, however, con- fine their attention to this business, but bought large tracts of land in the neighborhood which were considered not worth farming, but which through their energy and judicious manage- ment have been made to produce more than fourfold. They also enlarged and beautified the town of their adoption with large and sub- stantial buildings, and no village in that section of New Jersey has superior improvements. William Foster Reeve was a member of the New Jersey legislature for a number of terms, and it is an especially noteworthy fact indic- ative of the great esteem and confidence with which he and his father's family were regard- ed by the community in which they lived, that at the time he was serving in the lower house of the New Jersey legislature, his elder brother, Josiah Miller Reeve, was a member of the New Jersey council.


William Foster Reeve married Mary, daugh- ter of William Cooper, of Cooper's Point, Camden, New Jersey. Her grandfather was a descendant of old William Cooper, of New- ton township, and established the first ferry boat to ply from Camden to Philadelphia. The four children of William Foster and Mary (Cooper) Reeve are: I. William Cooper, re- ferred to below. 2. Augustus, referred to be- low. 3. Richard H., of Camden, New Jersey, the secretary and treasurer of the Cooper Hos- pital and trustee of the Cooper estate. He mar- ried Sarah Wyatt, daughter of Samuel P. Car- penter, and they have four children. 4. Re- becca Cooper, now living in Philadelphia, un- married.


(VI) William Cooper, eldest child of Will- iam Foster and Mary Wills (Cooper) Reeve, was born at Alloway, Salem county, New Jer- sey, June 27, 1831, and is now living in Salem, New Jersey. For his early education he attend- ed Clarkson Shepperd's School at Greenwich, New Jersey, and then the Friends' Select School of Philadelphia, after graduating from which he entered Haverford College. He was, however, unable to graduate as his father needed him at home to help in his business, and he was put in charge of his father's large plantation, of which at his father's death he became the owner. He subsequently purchased other farms, and being very successful in his agricultural endeavor soon became one of the largest of the gentlemen farmers of that region


as well as one of the most successful. In 1883 he came to Salem, New Jersey, where he has been engaged in administering his own and his wife's large property interests in Salem county. Mr. Reeve is in politics a Republican and a member of the Orthodox Society of Friends.


In 1860 William Cooper Reeve married Mary Mason, daughter of Richard M. and Hannah ( Mason) Acton. Her father was at one time state senator of New Jersey.


(VI) Augustus, second child and son of William Foster and Mary Wills (Cooper) Reeve, was born in Alloway, Salem county, New Jersey, August 31, 1833. After receiving his early education from private tutors, he spent two years at Haverford College, after which he for some time assisted his father in the care of the latter's large plantations. He then established himself in the lumber and hardware business at Alloways Town, New Jersey, and in 1863 removed to Safe Harbor, Pennsylvania, where with a Mr. Miller he con- ducted a general store for the iron works of that place. In 1866 he came to Camden, New Jersey, and began the manufacture of brick and sewer pipe, in which he has been eminently successful and at present has one of the most extensive plants of his time under his control. His offices are at 31 Market street. In politics Mr. Reeve is a Republican and he has served his party faithfully and well. He served for one term in the city government of Camden. Mr. Reeve is a member of the Camden Repub- lican Club, the Camden Board of Trade, and the Trades League of Philadelphia. He is a member of the Camden Friends' Meeting, and is a charter member of the corporation of the . Cooper Hospital of Camden, founded in 1875, and 1893 was elected president of that institu- tion's board of managers, a position of respon- sibility and honor which he still holds to the eminent satisfaction of the city's citizens. It is well worth mention that Mr. Reeve's daugh- ters are members of the Society of Colonial Dames and the Daughters of the American Revolution, the eldest also being the regent of the Nassau Chapter of the Colonial Dames of Camden. Mr. Reeve has spent much time in the study of the local history of his state, and is the author of several excellent and accurate papers and articles upon that subject, which have appeared in the public press.


Augustus Reeve married Rebecca Cooper, daughter of Isaac H. Wood, of Haddonfield, New Jersey. Their children are: I. Elizabeth Cooper, unmarried. 2. William Foster, general manager of his father's office; married Mary


819


STATE OF NEW JERSEY.


Jay, daughter of Attorney-General Samuel H. Grey ; two children : William Foster and Mary Jay. 3. Laura, unmarried. 4. Charles Gad- skill, married Rebecca Hannah, daughter of Joseph B. Cooper, of Camden, New Jersey, and has two children, Joseph Cooper and Doro- thy Morris.


The Colonial settlers in America GRIGGS by the name of Griggs to the number of about ten came to New England prior to 1700 from England, and some of them have been traced as of rec- ord in England at Lavenham, in Braekley, Hartest, Boxted and Ipswich. The English family of Griggs is very old. One branch of the ancient family bore this coat-of-arms: Gules three ostrich feathers argent. Crest : A sword in pale enfiled with a leopard's face proper.


The Griggs family of Massachusetts was es- tablished by Thomas Griggs, of Roxbury (now Boston), who came with wife Mary and sons Joseph and John and daughter Mary, and was of record as a land-owner as early as 1639 in the town of Roxbury, in the Massachusetts Bay Colony. Most of the persons bearing surname Griggs in America trace their lineage to this Thomas Griggs, of Roxbury. John W. Saxe, Esq., of Boston, has kindly submitted to the editor his manuscript history and notes of the Griggs Family in America. Through his researches the genealogy of the New Jersey family herein has been established. The wills, deeds and other records herein quoted were compiled by Mr. Saxe, in co-operation with Hon. John W. Griggs, of Paterson, and James L. Griggs, Esq., of Somerville, New Jersey.


The Colonial records of New Jersey men- tion among the first settlers the names of Ben- jamin, Daniel, Samuel and Thomas Griggs. The present Griggstown was founded by Ben- jamin Griggs and his brothers, on the banks of the Millstone river, where he settled and built a grist mill as early as 1733. These four brothers established the Griggs family in New Jersey, and their descendants are numerous and widely scattered through the west.


(I) John Griggs, father of Benjamin Griggs and three brothers who migrated to New Jer- sey, as stated, was a land-owner of Gravesend, Long Island, New York, as early as 1672. This John Griggs was probably the same John Griggs who was of record at Easthampton, Long Island, in 1659. According to family tradition this New Jersey branch came from New England progenitors through Connecti-


cut. The town of Gravesend had as its larg- est patentee Lady Deborah Moody, who set- tled there with Friends (Quakers) from Salem, Massachusetts. The wife of William Griggs, of Salem, Rachel (Hubbard), con- veyed, May 14, 1712, to her son Jacob, all her interest in the estate of her brother,. Benja- min Hubbard, "late of Long Island," deceased. Ann Griggs, daughter of George Griggs, who came from Lavenden, England, in 1633, in the ship "Hopewell," and settled in Boston, mar- ried Matthew Janes, and in 1644 went to Southampton, Long Island. Many of the pas- sengers in the list of the "Hopewell" in 1633 settled on Long Island. Accordingly, it is supposed that John Griggs, of Gravesend, was of this family, although his descent has not been fully established of record, and he may have been a son of John Griggs, who in 1636 was allotted land at Watertown, Massachu- setts, many settlers from which removed to Connecticut and founded towns of Long Island.


In 1660 John Griggs and Thomas Whittack, both of Gravesend, Long Island, were fined for "buying and selling" land on the first day of the week. Griggs declared that he did not re- member such covenant implying that he was bound by a town covenant. The court ruled the bargain void and fined each fifteen shillings and costs of court. He must have been of age before this date. He signed by mark, though he may have been able to write. Fre- quent records of him are found after that in Gravesend. He was sued June 7, 1669, by Leonard Jacob for debt: he shared in a di- vision of tillable land on Coney Island, etc., in 1670, and of the twenty-four heads of fam- ilies receiving grants, only two had larger lots. He conveyed to his son John eight acres of land on the east side of Gravesend, on a neck known as Ambrose Island. He and his son John Jr. sold to William Hensen, of New Utrecht, May 10, 1690, plantation No. 37 with buildings at Gravesend; also other lands and lot No. 9 on Gisbert's Island. He was living in 1698, according to the census taken that year. He had wife Elizabeth at Gravesend. Children : 1. John, mentioned below. 2. Dan- iel. 3. Thomas, had children : Elizabeth, John, Mary, Hannah, Thomas, mentioned in will of Henry Gillam, of Worcester, New York. 4. Benjamin, mentioned below. 5. Edward ( ?). was on a committee to lay out highways in Somerset county, New Jersey, February 25, 1733. 6. Samuel, was on tax-roll of Franklin township, New Jersey, which includes Griggs-


820


STATE OF NEW JERSEY.


town, with his brothers Daniel, Thomas and Benjamin.


(11) John (2), son of John (I) Griggs, was certainly born about 1660, for he was of age before 1685. He married (first) Anna Wyck- off, born May 29, 1665, daughter of Willem Willemse; (second) in 1684, Martha Wilkins (laughter of Obadiah Wilkins. He appears to have been considerably older than his brothers. and the only one of the sons having real estate transactions at Gravesend. He alone re- mained on Long Island. His father deeded land to him in Gravesend, and he owned land jointly with his father, as stated, before 1695. He sold lots No. 1 and 16 in Gravesend, March 20, 1685-86, to John Kendrick, an Indian trader of New York. His father probably died before 1703 when ( without the "Jr.") he deeded mill property at Gravesend. It is significant that Benjamin Griggs was also a mill owner in New Jersey. John sold land August 28, 1697, twenty acres, to Joachim Gullick for sixty pounds. He was constable in 1701. He owned slaves in Gravesend in 1768, and he appeared with his mother or step-mother Eliz- abeth in the census of 1763.


(II) Benjamin, son of John (1) Griggs, was born about 1680 at Gravesend. He was living in Gravesend, Long Island, in 1714-15. He removed with his brothers to the Mill- stone river, New Jersey, where he built a grist mill as early as 1733, and for him the town of Griggstown was named. His will, dated March 23, 1762, was proved in Somer- set county, New Jersey, February 23, 1768. He bequeathed to children mentioned below : To brother Samuel; sons Samuel and Daniel were executors; witnesses were Nicholas Vaghte, Francis Feurt and Isaac Wilkins. (Note that Wilkins was also from Gravesend and related.) Children: I. Daniel. . 2. Sam- uel. 3. Barrent. 4. Reuben. 5. Benjamin. 6. John, mentioned below. 7. Martha, mar- ried Rene Vanderbeek. 8. Jane, married Aaron Bennett. 9. Elinor, married John Sut- phin.


(III) John (3), son of Benjamin Griggs, was born about 1710-20. He died before his father (1758), leaving a son Benjamin, who was mentioned in his grandfather's will. Ad- ministration was granted Nicholas Vaghte, of Somerset county, principal creditor, January 20, 1758. John Griggs resided at Toms River, Monmouth county.


(IV) Benjamin (2), son of John (3) Griggs, was born March 22, 1754 (another record gives the more probable date of 1748),


died March 7, 1825. He married Eleanor Lane, born April 21, 1744, died April 8, 1829. Chil- dren : I. John B., born August 18, 1777; mar- ried Maria Johnson ; children : i. Benjamin ; ii. John V. N .; iii. Daniel, had son Levi D .; iv. Maria; v. Margaret; vi. Harriet; vii. Martha Jane; viii. Sarah Ann. 2. Sarah, January 5, 1779. 3. Aaron, October 20, 1780 ; died May 18, 1817. 4. Daniel, September 6, 1782; started by wagon to California in 1849-50, and died on the way. 5. George, July 25, 1785. 6. Jemima, January 13, 1788. 7. Mar- garet, February 22, 1790; died July 2, 1858; married, June 14, 1819, John Harris, of Wor- cester, England, born January 16, 1787, died March 22, 1870; their son, Benjamin Griggs Harris, born at Newton, New Jersey, July 21, 1821, married Eleanor Anne Neale, daughter of Francis Neale, of Baltimore, and had a daughter born June 14, 1863, married H. F. Mackintosh, of Toronto, Canada.


(II) Daniel, son of John (1) Griggs, was born at Gravesend, New York, about 1680-85. He was in Gravesend, an adult, in 1714-15. He appears to have gone with several brothers to New Jersey, where many settlers from Gravesend located earlier and later. He owned a plantation near what is now Fleming .. ton, Hunterdon county, New Jersey, and this property has descended by will and remained in the possession of the family until recently. The township in which he lived was originally known as Amwell. His will was dated August 22, 1757, and proved November 14, 1759. He must have died late in the year 1759. He be- queathed to wife Jackominad; to eldest son John (doubtless named for his grandfather) ; to sons Joachim, Daniel and Samuel; daugh- ters Mary, Catherine. The executioners were sons John, Joachim, and Daniel; witnesses. Samuel O. Hallock and Janel Matteson. Chil- dren of Daniel and Jackominad Griggs : 1. John, lived at Amwell; married Catherine Bower, daughter of Philip, and was on a committee to choose delegates to the constitutional conven- tion. 2. Joachim, was a soldier in the revolu- tion ; will dated at Amwell township, Hunter- don county, April 2, 1805, and proved October 17, 1806, at Trenton ; bequeathed to wife Anna, $1,334, etc .; to brothers John and Samuel Griggs and to Mary Hill, wife of Isaac, $80 each; to Anna B. Van Fleet $80, and Acha Hill, son of Isaac, $267; to sister Catherine, wife of Peter Williamson, of Sussex ; to Mary, widow of Thomas Peterson, now deceased ; and to Margaret, widow of Harp Peterson, and her children; appointed as executors his


821


STATE OF NEW JERSEY.


brother John Griggs and friends Cornelius Wyckoff and Isaac Hill; witnesses, Alexander Bonnell, William Geary and Nathaniel Sax- ton; inventory dated October 7, 1806, by Alexander Bonnell and Jonathan Higgins men- tioning a note of .$500 against the United States ; his widow Anne made her will Decem- ber 2, 1807 and it was proved November 8, 1808; she bequeaths to her own nephews and nieces. 3. Daniel, also of Amwell; left no children ; his will dated November 17, 1761, and proved September 27, 1762, mentions brothers John, Jackson (Joachim) and Sam- uel; sisters Catherine, Mary and Margaret ; executors John, Joachim and George, wit- nesses : Peter Peterson, Johannis Young, Jacob Mattison. 4. Samuel, mentioned below. 5. Mary, married Thomas Peterson. 6. Catline (Catherine), married Peter Williamson. 7. Margaret, married Harp Peterson.


(III) Samuel, son of Daniel Griggs, was born about 1740 in New Jersey. He married Catherine He lived at Amwell. His will was dated at Amwell, January 26, 1803. and proved October, 1812, at Flemington of that township. He bequeathed a fourth part of monies arising from the sale of his real es- tate to each of his surviving children, and the other fourth to the four children of his son Daniel, deceased. The executors were son Samuel Griggs and his friend Abraham Gu- lick, doubtless of the same family as Joachim Gulick who sold land owned in common with John Griggs and Samuel Gerritsen, of Graves- end. It is likely that the name of Joachim came into the family through its connection with the Gulick family. The witnesses of the will were Daniel Reading, Joseph Reading and Nathaniel Saxton. Samuel Griggs must have died about September, 1812. His executors sold the farm to Andrew Van Fleet, by deed dated April 1, 1813. This farm in Amwell ad- joined the homestead of Daniel Griggs, father of Samuel. and was bought May 2, 1769, of Micajah Gowe. The widow Catherine released her right of dower to her son Samuel, April 3. 1813. Children: 1. Charity. 2. Jemima. 3. Samuel, mentioned below. 4. Daniel, died be- fore 1812; children: John, Christopher, Joa- kim (Joachim), Samuel.


(IV) Samuel (2), son of Samuel (1) Griggs, was born at Amwell, Hunterdon county, New Jersey, about 1775. He married Sarah Ann Griggs, born January 5, 1779. daughter of Benjamin Griggs, mentioned above, of Newton, New Jersey. He was a farmer at Flemington, part of the old township


of Amwell. In politics he was first a Federal- ist then a Whig; in religion a Presbyterian. His will was dated at Raritan township, Hun- terdon county April 12, 1840, and proved March 2, 1842. He bequeathed to his wife Sarah $150, and provided that she receive yearly the interest on $2,500, etc. The re- mainder of the estate to be divided equally among all the children except John, who is to receive $1,200 less because of advancement made to him; also son Samuel to have $400 deducted from his share because of bond tes- tator held; at his wife's death the $2,500 to be distributed equally among the children. The executors were his sons Daniel and Aaron ; witnesses: Nathaniel G. Mattison, Joseph H. Reading and George A. Allen. Children: I. Daniel, mentioned below. 2. John. 3. Sam- uel, went west about 1845. 4. George, settled in Shelby county, Illinois. 5. Benjamin, went west when a young man. 6. Aaron, lived in New Jersey. 7. Margaret, lived in New Jer- scy. 8. Ellen, married James L. Hixon.


(V) Daniel Griggs, son of Samuel (2) Griggs, was born in Flemington, New Jersey, March 7, 1798, died August 24, 1868. He had a common school education, and followed farming in his native town, and at Newton, New Jersey. He was a prominent member of the Presbyterian church, was superintendent of the first Sunday school in New Jersey, at Flemington, in the early thirties, and was for thirty-five years elder of the Presbyterian church of Newton. He married ( first) Eliza- beth Ann Johnson, born June 16, 1800, daugh- ter of Henry Johnson, granddaughter of Cap- tain Henry Johnson, who was a captain in the New Jersey militia in the revolutionary war. He married ( second ) Emeline J. Johnson, born June 22, 1813, a sister of his first wife. Children by his first wife: I. Theodore, born February 26, 1826. 2. Rachel Ann, February 9. 1828. 3. Henry J., May 12, 1834. By his second wife : 4. George Van Tile, October 31. 1839. 5. Charles Edgar, September 20, 1842. 6. John William, July 10. 1849. 7. Ellen Hixon, August 19, 1851 ..


(VI) George Van Tile, son of Daniel Griggs, was born October 31, 1839; served in the civil war as captain in the Second Regi- ment, New York Cavalry, and was brevetted colonel for conspicuous gallantry in action. He was killed in the battle of Culpeper Court House, Virginia, October 11, 1863. Griggs Post, Grand Army of the Republic, at Newton, New Jersey, is named in his honor.


(VI) John William Griggs, youngest son


822


STATE OF NEW JERSEY.


of Daniel Griggs, was born in Newton, Sussex county, New Jersey, July 10, 1849. He was graduated from Lafayette College in 1868; (LL. B., Princeton, 1896; Yale, 1900), and entered upon the study of law in the office of Hon. Robert Hamilton. Mr. Griggs in May, 1871, became a student with Socrates Tuttle, of Paterson, and was admitted to the practice of his profession at the November term of the supreme court, 1871, and counsellor in 1874. In 1876 and 1877 Mr. Griggs was a member of the general assembly from Passaic county, and was a member of a legislative committee chosen to revise and harmonize legislation af- fected by the provisions of the amended state constitution. In 1878 he was appointed coun- sel of the board of chosen freeholders of Pas- saic, and in 1879 became the city counsel of Paterson, serving during four years. For two terms, 1882 to 1886, he represented Passaic county in the New Jersey senate, in 1886 act- ing as president of that body.


It was in November, 1895, that Mr. Griggs was elected governor of New Jersey, being the first Republican chosen for that office since 1865, and he introduced the line of Republican chief magistrates who have occupied that office during the past thirteen years. An over- whelming majority placed him in power. Dur- ing his occupancy of the office, which covered two years, Governor Griggs made his ad- ministration memorable by the dignity with which he sustained his position, and the clear reasoning shown in his state powers. The qualities of his mind commending him to the late President William McKinley, caused the appointment of ex-Governor Griggs to the po- sition of federal attorney-general. To accept this dignified place, Mr. Griggs resigned the governorship in January, 1898, and remained in President McKinley's cabinet until April 1, 1901, and then resumed the practice of his profession. He is a member of The Hague Permanent Court of Arbitration. Since return- ing to practice Mr. Griggs has been identified with large financial interests in New York and Paterson, and is a member of leading clubs in both cities. His residence is in Paterson.


John William Griggs married (first) Oc- tober 7, 1874, Carolin Webster Brandt, of Belleville, New Jersey, daughter of William and Eliza (Leavitt) Brandt; she was born 1852, died January 21, 1891. Children: I. John Leavitt, born June 10, 1876; married, November 19, 1902, Ruth Hoxsey, born March 17, 1882, daughter of Thomas Franklin and Elizabeth (Paddock) Hoxsey; children: i.


-


John W., born November 7, 1904; ii. Eliza- beth Hoxsey, June 18, 1906. 2. Helen, born November 22, 1877. 3. Leila, born November 21, 1879; married, October 12, 1904, Oscar Clark Huntoon; child, Carolyn Grant, born June 21, 1905. 4. Daniel, born November 21, 1880. 5. Constance, born November 23, 1882. He married (second) April 15, 1893, Laura Elizabeth Price, of Cleveland, Ohio, daughter of Warwick and Beulah R. (Farmer ) Price, born October 10, 1861. Children: 6. Eliza- beth, born May 31, 1894. 7. Janet, born June 20, 1896.




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.