Genealogical and memorial history of the state of New Jersey, Volume IV, Part 4

Author: Lee, Francis Bazley, 1869- ed
Publication date: 1910
Publisher: New York, N.Y. : Lewis Historical Publishing Co.
Number of Pages: 620


USA > New Jersey > Genealogical and memorial history of the state of New Jersey, Volume IV > Part 4


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(VI) Benjamin Jones, son of Dr. Robert and Elizabeth Ash (Jones) Taylor, was born in Burlington county, New Jersey, and is now living at 1729 Spruce street, Philadelphia, having his summer home at "Sunbury." He was educated at the Friends' Select School and the Protestant Episcopal Academy, both of Philadelphia, and after leaving them received a thorough business training and for eight years he followed mercantile pursuits in Phila- delphia. During the civil war he served for three months in 1863 in the Grey Reserves, and was present during the shelling of Carlisle by General Fitz Hugh Lee, on July I, of that year. He also saw military service in Tennes- see and Mississippi as volunteer aide on the staffs of different commanders. After retiring from mercantile pursuits he made his home at "Sunbury," the old family place in Bristol township, and devoted much of his time to the transaction of financial business, acting as agent for others and assisting in the care and management of the large estates blonging to the family. He has been for many years director of the Farmer's National Bank of Bristol, and when Pierson Mitchell died in 1894, Mr. Taylor was elected to succeed him as president, representing the third generation of the family, the others being his grandfather, Anthony Taylor (2), and his uncle, Caleb Newbold Taylor, who served in that capacity. Mr. Taylor has inherited many of the business qualities of his ancestors on both sides of the house, and is interested in almost all of the local business enterprises. He and his sister, Alice Jones Taylor, referred to below, are the owners of the ancestral house, "Sunbury," a plantation of four hundred acres, which they are the fourth generation to possess, and which has now been in uninterrupted occupancy by the family for over a century. Mr. Taylor is a member of Henry Clay Beatty Post, G. A. R.,


Mary N. Taylor


6.12 Taylor


W T.Bather, NY


Anthony Taylor


Cuerporual Pub. Lo


Kenjamu camino & Taylor


Sunbury Farm


Emily'W. Taylor


1.


1136382


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STATE OF NEW JERSEY.


and of numerous other social fraternal and patriotic associations.


(VI) Captain Anthony, son of Dr. Robert and Elizabeth Ash (Jones) Taylor, was born in Burlington county, New Jersey, October II, 1837, and died in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, May 21, 1894. During the civil war he ren- dered most distinguished services to the Union cause, and in 1893 received from congress the United States medal of honor "for signal acts of bravery, and meritorious service." This medal correponds to the Victoria cross, so famous in English military annals, and is the most highly prized and distinguished honor obtainable in the service. Mr. Taylor enlisted August 8, 1862, in the Fifteenth Pennsylvania Cavalry, as a private ; was promoted sergeant, October 30, 1862; first sergeant, March I, 1863; first lieutenant of Company A, May 8, 1863; captain, June 1, 1865, having had com- mand of the company as lieutenant command- ing, almost from the date of his commission as first lieutenant. Prior to 1865 he served under Brigadier-General W. S. Rosencranz in the Army of the Cumberland, and participated in the battles of Antietam, Stone River, Chick- amauga and many other engagements. From June 1, 1865, to the close of the war, he served on the staff of General William J. Palmer, as aide-de-camp, and was honorably mustered out June 21, 1865. He married, February 21, 1871, Caroline Fletcher, daughter of Lawrence and Mary ( Winder) Johnson. Children : Mary Lawrence, married Bromley Wharton; Eliza- beth Elmslie, married Houston Dunn.


(VI) Alice Jones, daughter of Dr. Robert and Elizabeth Ash (Jones ) Taylor, was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, May 4, 1847, and is now living unmarried, with her brother, Benjamin Jones Taylor, at 1729 Spruce street and at "Sunbury," Bristol township, Bucks county, Pennsylvania.


(V) Anthony (3), son of Anthony (2) and Mary (Newbold) Taylor, was born at "Sun- bury," Bristol township, Bucks county, Penn- sylvania, December 21, 1804, and died in Bur- lington county, New Jersey, July 13, 1833. He married, about 1831, Mary, daughter of Thomas and Mary (Taylor) Newbold, who after her husband's death, married (second) Samuel Hyatt, of Delaware. She was her hus- band's first cousin. (See Thomas Newbold (V), above, and for her maternal ancestry see Mary Taylor (IV), above and below). No children.


(V) Caleb Newbold, son of Anthony (2) and Mary ( Newbold) Taylor, was born at "Sun-


bury," Bristol township, Bucks county, Penn- sylvania, July 27, 1814. For over fifty years he was one of the most prominent men in Bucks county, Pennsylvania, and was the ac- knowledged leader first of the Whig and after- wards of the Republican party in that section of the state. He represented his party in the state and national conventions almost continu- ously after reaching his majority, and was the candidate of his district for congress four sepa- rate times, being elected twice. In 1866 he was elected to the fortieth congress as the Republican representative from Pennsylvania, and in 1868 to the forty-first congress. He took his seat April 13, 1870, after successfully contesting the election. of John R. Reading, and served until March 3, 1871. He was also one of the most prominent business men in the county, and amassed a large estate, owning at one time three thousand acres of land in Bucks county. He succeeded his father as president of the Farmers' National Bank of Bucks coun- ty. He died unmarried.


(V) Franklin, son of Anthony (2) and Mary (Newbold) Taylor, was born at "Sunbury," Bristol township, Bucks county, Pennsylvania, December 1, 1822, and is now living at Ger- mantown, Pennsylvania, being the last sur- viving member of his generation. After re- ceiving his early education in the common schools in Philadelphia, he entered Princeton University, from which he graduated in 1840, receiving later his M. A. degree. He is now (1910) one of the oldest living graduates of the University. For many years Mr. Taylor was one of the prominent lawyers of the Phila- delphia bar. He married, in 1857, Emily Wins- low, who died in 1904. Children: Edward, married Lydia Sharpless; Frederick, married Louise Spooner ; Mary C., married C. M. Clark.


(IV) Mary, daughter of Anthony (I) and Ann ( Newbold) Taylor, died July 21, 18II. She married, February 19, 1789, as first wife, Thomas, son of William and Susanna (Ste- venson) Newbold (see Newbold and Steven- son above).


(IV) Ann, daughter of Anthony (I) and Ann (Newbold) Taylor, died June 1I, 1861. She married, in 1816, as second wife, Thomas, son of William and Susanna (Stevenson ) New- bold, the widower of her sister, Mary, referred to above.


(The Emlen Line).


George Emlen, the founder of the family of his name in America, was born in the town of Shepton Mallet, Somersetshire, England. He was apprenticed to a vintner in London, and


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STATE OF NEW JERSEY.


his parents having died when he was still young, he was left to the care of an aunt who was a Presbyterian. This aunt being very much displeased at his becoming a Friend, George Emlen was obliged to provide for him- self, and consequently he determined to emi- grate to America, which he did some time be- fore 1685. He married (first), November 12, 1685, Eleanor, daughter of Nathaniel Allen, whose father, a man of very considerable note, was one of the three men named by Will- iam Penn to lay out the city of Philadelphia. He married (second), June 5, 1694, Hannah, daughter of William and Ann ( Kirke ) Garrett, who came from Leicestershire, England, in 1684, settled in Darby, Pennsylvania, and after- wards removed to Philadelphia. Children by second marriage, the three by first marriage having all died in infancy: 1. George, referred to below. 2. Samuel, born April 15, 1697; married, December 2, 1731, Rachel Hudson. 3 Caleb, born June 9, 1699; died unmarried. 4. Joshua, born April 14, 1701 ; married ( first ) Mary (Holton) Hudson, (second) Deborah Powell. 5. Hannah, born February 3, 1703-4; died unmarried. 6. Ann, born May 19, 1705; married, June 15, 1732, William Miller. 7. Mary, born January I, 1708-9; married, 1828, John Armitt. 8. Sarah, born March 19, 1709- IO; married, May 25, 1738, James Cresson.


(II) George (2), son of George (I) and Hannah (Garrett) Emlen, was born in Phila- delphia, Pennsylvania, July 7, 1695, and died in October, 1754. In the family memorial written by his brothers, Samuel and Joshua, it is said of him that "he was a man of very good repute for sobriety, diligence, industry & care," and that "being the oldest son became as a ten- der Father to his Brothers & sisters." He was prominent in the Society of Friends, was a brewer by occupation, and acquired consider- able wealth. October 6, 1730, he was elected a member of the common council of Philadel- phia, was one of the founders of the famous Library Company of America, and was in many other ways a prominent figure and factor in the happenings of his day and the unfolding of his city's history. He married, April 24, 1717, Mary, daughter of Robert and Susanna Heath, who is said to have died June 2, 1777. "For many years," her brothers-in-law wrote of her, she was "a minister amongst Friends." Children: 1. George, referred to below. 2. Hannah, born June 1, 1722; died January 30, 1777 ; married, March 24, 1740, William, son of James Logan, the distinguished statesman


of colonial days, mayor of Philadelphia, chief justice and governor of Pennsylvania, etc. 3. Joseph, born July 1, 1728 ; died young."


(III) George (3), son of George (2) and Mary (Heath) Emlen, was born in Philadel- phia, Pennsylvania, August 21, 1718, and died January 3, 1776. He succeeded his father in the brewing business, and inherited the home- stead house on Chestnut street, above Fifth, opposite the State House, or Independence Hall. He also erected a country seat in White- marsh valley, above Chestnut street, now known as the Emlen House, which in the fall of 1777 was for a time occupied by General Washing- ton. George Emlen was one of the signers of the non-importation agreement of October 25, 1765. He married, October 25, 1740, Ann, daughter of Joseph and Margaret (Satter- thwaite) Reckless, of Chesterfield, Burlington county, New Jersey, who is said to have been a great-granddaughter of John Reckless, sheriff of Nottinghamshire, mentioned in the journal of George Fox. She was born about 1720, and died February 4, 1816. Children : I. George, born April 25, 1741-2; died November 23, 1812; married, February 1, 1775, Sarah Fishbourne. 2. Caleb, referred to below. 3. Mary, born December 19, 1746; died Septem- ber 19, 1820; married David Beveridge. 4. Joseph, born December 28, 1748. 5. Margaret, born April 15, 1750; died May 4, 1822; mar- ried, May 23, 1771, Samuel Howell Jr. 6. Samuel, born August 25, 1767. 7. James, born June 26, 1760; died October 3, 1798; married, April 23, 1783, Phebe Peirce. 8. Ann, died March 21, or 22, 1815; married, October 9, 1788, Warner Mifflin.


(IV) Caleb, son of George (3) and Ann ( Reckless) Emlen, was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, December 15, 1744. He was one of the Quaker leaders whose arrest was contemplated by the supreme executive council of Philadelphia just before the arrival of Gen- eral Howe's army in the city, because of his supposed tory proclivities, based upon his op- position to armed resistance. He married, Feb- ruary 25, 1773, Mary, daughter of Jeremiah and Mary (Head) Warder. Children : Mary, mar- ried Thomas Greaves ; Anne, married Charles Pleasants ; Caleb, referred to below. 4-9. Names unknown.


(V) Caleb (2), son of Caleb ( I) and Mary (Warder) Emlen, was born in Philadelphia. He married Maria Graeff. Children: Mary, married Dr. Squire Littell; Calebina, referred to below.


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(VI) Calebina, daughter of Caleb (2) and Maria (Graeff) Emlen, died in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in August, 1872, and is buried in the churchyard of St. James the Less, on the Nicetown road, at the Falls of the Schuylkill. She married, in 1830, William Henry, son of William and Mary (Smith) Newbold (see Newbold above. )


(The Scholey Line).


The Scholey family from Yorkshire, Eng- land, were among the earliest settlers of Penn- sylvania and New Jersey. They were noted as prosperous and influential citizens, large land- owners, and active in business and religious affairs. Thomas Scholey came to Burlington in the "flie boat" Martha in 1677, and Robert Scholey arrived in the following year, 1678, in the ship "Shield." They settled first at Crewcorne, Bucks county, Pennsylvania, but later removed to Burlington county, New Jer- sey. John Scholey, a near relative, if not a brother of Robert and Thomas, and the found- er of the branch at present under consideration, came from Aughton, parish of Aston, county York, England, about 1680, and settled in Chesterfield township, Burlington county, New Jersey, with his wife and children. He died there between March 29, 1695, and April 7, 1696, the dates of the execution and proving of his will in which he names his wife, Isabel, and sons, John and Thomas.


(II) John (2), son of John ( I) and Isabel Scholey, was born probably in England, and died between 1734 and 1739. He married (first ) in the Burlington monthly meeting, 1697, Rebecca Bennett ; (second) Frances (Taylor ) Nicholson, widow of Joseph Nicholson, of Bur- lington county, and daughter of Samuel (I) and Susanna ( Horsman) Taylor (see Taylor above). Children : I. Susanna, referred to below. 2. John, born November 22, 1714-15; died about 1757 ; married, 1743, Rachel Wright. 3. Thomas, born December 5, 1718 ; died young. 4. Mary, born December 24, 1720; married (first) Jonathan Barton; (second) Thomas Black; (third) Samuel Wright. 5. Isabel, born February 28, 1721-2 ; married, 1750, Jacob Ridgway. 6. Samuel, born May 25, 1723. 7. Rebecca, born August 3, 1725 ; married, 1747, Joseph Wright. 8. Sarah, born June 6, 1727 ; married, 1752, Joseph Horner. 9. John, born August 3, 1729; married, 1750, Mary Wright. IO. Ann, married, 1725, Thomas Scattergood.


(III) Susanna, daughter of John (2) and Frances (Taylor-Nicholson) Scholey, was born


in Burlington county, New Jersey, December 24, 17II. She married, April 15, 1730, Mich- ael (2), son of Michael ( I ) and Rachel (Cleay- ton) Newbold ( see Newbold above).


(The Cole Line).


Samuel Cole and his wife, Elizabeth, found- ers of this family in West Jersey, emigrated from Cole's Hill, county Hertford, England, and landed on the Jersey shore a little above Philadelphia. He was a haberdasher and hat- ter by trade. He located first on five hundred acres of land on the north side of the mouth of Cooper's Creek, fronting the Delaware river ; later he sold this land and removed to Peni- saukin, settling near William Matlock and Timothy Hancock, and named his place New Orchard. He took a prominent part in the political troubles of the province, especially in the settlement of the boundary line between the counties of Burlington and Gloucester, in which he was particularly interested because his land lay on the stream of water and on both sides of the highway where the trouble existed. He was a member of the West Jer- sey legislature, 1683-85. Shortly after this he returned to England to arrange some business matters, and on his return fell sick at the island of Barbadoes and died there. Letters of administration on his estate were granted to his widow, Elizabeth, March 25, 1693. She subsequently married (second) Griffith Mor- gan. Children: Samuel, referred to below ; Mary, married James Wild.


(II) Samuel (2), son of Samuel (I) and Elizabeth Cole, died at New Orchard, Water- ford township, Gloucester county, New Jer- sey, between November 25, 1728, and Decem- ber 12, 1728, the dates of the execution of his will and the appraising of his personal estate. His will was proved December 18, following. He was sheriff of Gloucester county in 1710, 1713 and 1724. He married Mary, daughter of Thomas and Mary ( Elton) Kendall, whose father had come to West Jersey as a bricklayer in the employ of the proprietor, Dr. Daniel Wills. In 1697 he built the first corn mill in Gloucester. Children : 1. Samuel, referred to below. 2. Thomas, married Hannah Stokes. 3. Joseph, married Mary Wood. 4. Kendall, married Ann, daughter of William Jr. and Elizabeth (Stockton ) Budd ( see those families in index). 5. William. 6. Elizabeth, married (first) Jacob Burcham, (second) Benjamin Cooper. 7. Mary, married Edward Tonkin. 8. Susanna, married William (3), son of William


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(2) and Elizabeth (Stockton) Budd, brother to his brother-in-law Kendall's wife. 9. Rachel, married Enoch Roberts. 10. Jane.


(III) Samuel (3), son of Samuel (2) and Mary (Kendall) Cole, married in the Evesham monthly meeting, 1731, Mary, daughter of Samuel and Hope (Wills) Lippincott ( see Lippincott and Wills in index). Children : Martha, married, 1762, as second wife, David Davis; Mary, referred to below.


(IV) Mary, daughter of Samuel and Mary (Lippincott) Cole, died in 1789, or 1790. She married, June 3, 1756, John, son of Michael (3) and Susanna (Scholey) Newbold .(see Newbold and Scholey above).


GIBBY Although the Gibby family of New Jersey did not come to this coun- try until after its formation as an independent nation, they have already won for themselves an enviable distinction and repu- tation in the legal and political lives of the people of their adoption. They deservedly rank to-day among the representative families of Northern New Jersey.


(I) John Gibby, founder of this family in America, was one of the "Emmet rebels" of 1798, and emigrated to America from Ireland in 1826. He was a block cutter and engraver. He married Mary Dunlap. Children: Will- iam, referred to below; Margaret, married Joseph Barrett, of Hamilton, Ohio; Sarah, married Barry, of Paterson, New Jer- sey ; Eliza, married Merrick; John; Caroline, married Abraham Marsh; Robert Dunlap.


(II) William, son of John and Mary (Dun- lap) Gibby, was born April 7, 1818, in Man- chester, England, and died in Rahway, New Jersey, April 8, 1888. He was brought to this country by his father in 1826, and after leav- ing school learned the trade of wood engrav- ing. Later he went into the real estate busi- ness. From 1864 to 1874 he was a lay judge of Union county, and he was one of the organ- izers of the Free School in Rahway. He was a Democrat in politics, president of the board of education, a town trustee, and a councilman for many years. He married, July 12, 1838, Frances, daughter of Samuel Mckinley, who emigrated with his two brothers, Alexander and James, from Ireland. She was born Feb- ruary 5, 1807, and died November 25, 1892. Children: 1. William James, see forward. 2. Mary Jane, born November 20, 1840; married Henry Newton Spenser ; children: Alexander G., Henry Lyman, Francis I. and William


Lines Spenser. 3. Alexander, born February 5, 1845 ; died April 7, 1868. 4. Isabella, born 1846; died 1848. 5. Isabella, born 1848; mar- ried Cornelius Boice ; died ; child: Helen Rae Boice. 6. Robert Dunlap, referred to below. 7. Sarah Frances, born October 10, 1851 ; died in 1895. 8. Independence, born July 4, 1854; living at 230 North Pleasant street, Jackson, Michigan.


(III) William James, son of William Gibby, was born April 11, 1839, and died March 31, 1887. He was one of the most prominent men in Mercer county in his day, having removed to Princeton early in life. He was educated in the schools of Rahway, where he was born, and at the State Normal School at Trenton. After graduating he accepted the position of principal of the public schools of Princeton, and settled there. On May 8, 1868, he was ap- pointed county superintendent of public in- struction for the county of Mercer, and held that position until his death. While teaching school he studied law with Leroy H. Ander- son Esq., of Princeton and Trenton, and was admitted to practice at the November term, 1875, and as counsellor at November term, 1878. He practiced in Princeton. He was prominently identified with the politics and public life of Mercer county, and served as mayor of the borough of Princeton two terms. He was always a Democrat. He married, November 8, 1866, Helen Day, born January 20, 1839, now living in Newark, daughter of John S. Budd (see Budd). Children : I. William Dwight, referred to below. 2. Leroy Anderson, born April 12, 1870; lives in Sum- mit, New Jersey ; married Nellie Hayes; one son, Ralph Hayes. 3. Herbert Budd, born September 16, 1871 ; a physician and surgeon in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania ; married Emma Bodmer; children: Helen and Herbert. 4. Helen Day, born July 24, 1873. 5. Walter Percival, born January 21, 1875; a special agent for Lehigh Valley Coal Company at New York; married Jessie Ross, of West Pittston ; children: Percival Ross and Rosalie. 6. Ed- gar Marsh, born November 12, 1877; a furni- ture merchant in New York City; married Janet G. Brown, of New York; child, Isabel. 7. Harold James, born July 18, 1882 ; a physi- cian and surgeon of Pittston, Pennsylvania.


(IV) William Dwight, eldest child of Will- iam James and Helen Day ( Budd) Gibby, was born in Princeton, New Jersey, April 11, 1868. He prepared for college in the public schools of Princeton and the Princeton Preparatory School, and graduated from the College of


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STATE OF NEW JERSEY.


New Jersey, now Princeton University, in the class of 1890. He then read law in the office of Judge William M. Lanning, at Trenton, and afterwards in that of Guild & Lum, in Newark, and was admitted to the New Jersey bar as attorney in November, 1893, and as counsellor in February, 1897. Since that time he has been practicing in Newark, and has made a well deserved reputation for ability and worth in his profession. He is a Democrat in politics. In 1891 he was tax assessor in Princeton, for four years he held the same office in Summit, New Jersey, and for three years was a member of the Summit Board of Health. He is a member of Trinity Presby- terian Church of South Orange, and vice- president of its board of trustees. He is a member of the Lawyers' Club of Newark.


Mr. Gibby married, December 3, 1903, in Buffalo, New York, Carolyn Maude, born Oc- tober 14, 1877, daughter of Albert G. and Ada F. (Weller) Foote, whose children are: I. Mally, married Alfred Griggs, and has one child, Harold. 2. Carolyn Maude, referred to above. 3. Charles, married Mae Wheeler, and has Charles Norman. 4. Frances. Children of William Dwight and Carolyn Maude (Foote) Gibby : Carolyn Maude, born March 11, 1905; Edith Florence, July 19, 1907; William Foote, September 19, 1909.


(The Budd Line).


(II) Thomas (2), fourth son of Rev. Thomas Budd (q. v.), died after September 9, 1697, when he wrote his will. He held many impor- tant trusts in the province of New Jersey, was one of the most prominent men among the first generation of the proprietors of West Jersey, and until 1690, when he removed to Philadel- phia, was a merchant in Burlington. He mar- ried Susana -, and had four children, mentioned in his will: John, referred to below ; Thomas ; Mary ; Rose.


(III) John, child of Thomas (2) and Sus- ana Budd, who made his will when he was "very old," March 20, 1749, it being proved September 6 following, removed from Bur- lington to Hunterdon county, New Jersey, where he became progenitor of the Morris county branch of the family. He married Sarah - -, who survived him until about 1760, and married (second), after his death, John Scott, of Hanover. Children: 1. John, M. D., removed to Charleston, South Carolina. 2. Thomas, died unmarried ; surgeon in United States navy, and blown up in the "Randolph," during her engagement with a British frigate.


3. William, returned to England. 4. Berne, referred to below. 5. Susan, married Stewart, whose children became the founders of Stewartsville, New Jersey. 6. Catharine, removed to Charleston, South Carolina, and married Gilchrist.


(IV) Berne, son of John and Sarah Budd. married and had children: John, referred to below ; William; David; Sarah.


(V) John (3), son of Berne Budd. of Hun- terdon county, was a physician of some note in Hunterdon and Morris counties. He married (first) Mary, daughter of Moses Lum; (sec- ond) Widow Betsey Cobert. Children, the last two by second marriage: I. Dortee Berne, M. D., of New York; married Catharine Rey- nolds. 2. John S., referred to below. 3. Vin- cent V., married (first) Nancy Ward, (sec- ond) Jane Hancock. 4. Joanna Vaste, mar- ried (first) Parrott Reynolds, (second) Noble Barry. 5. Caroline. 6. Mary, married John Meeker. 7. Phebe, married ( first ) Edwin Tryam. 8. Susan Amanda, married Ambrose Bruen. 9. Jane C., married Israel Dickerson. 10. Eliza, married Stewart Marsh, M. D. II. Sarah, married George Severn.


(VI) John (4), son of John (3) and Mary (Lum) Budd, was born in Hunterdon county, New Jersey, and removed to Chatham, Morris county, where he died. He married Charlotte, daughter of Aaron M. Ward. Children : John C., married Bridget, or Ann, Warren : Thomas D., of St. Louis, Missouri; Nancy A .; Syl- vester I., married Elizabeth Crane; Stephen ; Caroline E .; Helen Day, referred to below ; Ludlow Day ; George S .; Mary E .; Frank M.




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