USA > New York > Genealogical and family history of central New York : a record of the achievements of her people in the making of a commonwealth and the building of a nation, Volume I > Part 54
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(The Harris Line).
This name is one frequently found in early New England records, as several families set- tled in Massachusetts, Rhode Island and Con- necticut, prior to 1700. This branch of the family descends from English ancestors. The name is derived from the possessive of Henry or Harry as Harry's, finally becoming the sur- name Harris. Thomas Harris, born in Eng- land, emigrated to New England and settled at Charlestown, Massachusetts, in 1630. IIis wife was Elizabeth, who survived him and be- came the wife of Deacon William Stilson, of Charlestown. She died February 16, 1669-70, aged ninety-three years. Deacon Stilson in his will. made April 12, 1688, named John Harris, Thomas Harris, William llarris, Dan- iel Harris and Anne Maverick (widow of Elias Maverick) as the children of his first wife.
( II ) Daniel, son of William and Elizabeth Harris, had a house lot assigned to him in Rowley. Massachusetts, very soon after the first assignment of lots in 1644. He was a
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carpenter and wheelwright, and carried on both trades at Rowley. On the 10th and 21st of August, 1652, he sold his lands in Rowley, and soon afterward removed to Middletown, Connecticut, where, in 1660, he was "approved to keep an inn." He was appointed lieutenant in 1661, and later was commissioned captain. He married Mary, daughter of Joseph Weld, of Roxbury, Massachusetts. "Captain Daniel Harris departed this life the last of November, 1701." "Mary, the widow of Captain Daniel Harris departed this life September 5, 1711." Children, all but the first, born at Middletown : Mary, born at Rowley, married Isaac Johnson ; Daniel, of further mention; Joseph, died young ; Thomas, twice married ; Elizabeth, died young ; Sarah (2), married - Hunnewell ; William, born July 17, 1665: John, married (first ) Susannah Collins, (second) Mindwell Lyman ; Hannah, twice married.
(III) Captain Daniel (2) Harris, son of Captain Daniel (1) and Mary (Weld) Harris. was born at Middletown. Connecticut, July 15, 1653, died October 18, 1735. He also held the military rank of captain. He married (first ), December 14, 1680, Abigail Barnes, died May 22, 1723. He married (second), January 5. 1726-27, Elizabeth, widow of Samuel Cook, of Wallingford. Children by first wife, all born in Middletown : Abigail, Mary, Daniel, Joseph, Patience and John.
(IV) John, son of Captain Daniel (2) and Abigail (Barnes) Harris, was born in Middle- town, Connecticut, March 1, 1690-91. He mar- ried Rachel Moss, of Wallingford or Derby, Connecticut. They lived at Cornwall, New York, and later at the "Oblong." Dutchess county, New York.
(V) John (2), son of John (I) and Rachel ( Moss) Harris, was born in Derby, Connecti- cut, April, 1744. He was the first of his line to settle in Pine Plains, New York. He was the founder of the Harris Scythe Works, going to Pine Plains when twenty years of age and beginning work on an anvil in a shop owned by his uncle Joseph. This eventually grew into a very large business. He married Mary Gam- ble, and, about 1770, went to Fort Ann, New York, returning to Pine Plains after the war, and resumed scythe-making. Ile died Novem- ber 27, 1814. His widow died December 20, 1834.
(VI) John (3), son of Jolin (2) and Mary ( Gamble ) Harris, was born November 2, 1776. He married Elizabeth -, and had issue.
(VII) John (4), son of John (3) and Eliz- abeth Harris, was born September 12, 1802, died January 19, 1872. He was of Orange county. New York. He married, January 12. 1826, Adeline Loomis, born November 18, 1802, died November 14, 1867.
(VIII) Oliver Porter, son of John (4) and Adeline (Loomis ) Harris, was born at Mont- gomery, Orange county, New York, October 17, 1837, died May 6, 1898, at Nichols, New York. He received his early education in the Newburg. New York, schools, chose the pro- fession of law, entered Albany Law School. whence he was graduated, and later admitted to the New York state bar. He located in Nichols, Tioga county, New York, where he practiced his profession. He later became in- terested in the wholesale produce business. being senior of the firm Harris, De Groat & Company. He was an active Republican in politics, and, for several years, served as jus- tice of the peace. He married, at Yonkers, Westchester county, New York, March 21, 1867, Harriet Isabel Corsa, born September 18. 1843, at Montgomery, New York, died June I. 1882, daughter of Solomon and Elizabeth ( De- voe) Corsa, and granddaughter of Andrew Corsa, and great-granddaughter of Isaac Corsa. Isaac Corsa was born in 1735, died 1822. He married Mary Gibbs. Their son, Andrew Corsa, married, October 12, 1792, Mary Poole. born February 10, 1776, daughter of Solomon Poole. Their son, Solomon Corsa, was born 1800, died 1891; married Elizabeth Devoe. born March 1, 1807, daughter of John and granddaughter of John Devoe, born 1733, mar- ried 1754, Maria DuBois. John Devoe (2), born February 5. 1778. married Sarah Weeks, born April 13, 1771. Children of Solomon and Elizabeth (Devoe ) Corsa: Robert, born July 31, 1826; Sarah Ann, died young : Eliza- beth, born July 27, 1833; Martha, June 26, 1836; Matilda, June 26, 1838; Emma, October 20, 1841 ; Harriet Isabel, September 18, 1843, married Oliver Porter Harris: John D., Feb- ruary 7, 1846; Walton, January 14, 1850. Chil- dren of Oliver Porter and Harrict Isabel ( Corsa ) Harris: Nettie May, married Frank Ross, child, Nina Frances: Emma Mary, of further mention ; Maud Anna, married Milton Johnson, children : Isabel, Harris and Robert ; Lizzie Viola, married Dr. Walter Everett, child, Oliver Harris.
(IX) Emma Mary, second daughter of Oli- ver Porter and Harriet Isabel (Corsa) Harris,
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married, May 27, 1890, Dr. Robert L. Louns- berry, of Binghamton, New York, their pres- ent home.
Francis Wilson was a native of WILSON West Meath, Ireland, and was educated and spent his boyhood in his native county. He married there, and, about 1825, when still a young man, came to this country and located in Oneida county, New York. After a time he bought a farm at Amboy, Oswego county, New York, where he followed farming the rest of his days and was a useful and respected citizen. He held vari- ous offices of trust and responsibility in the town, and was an old-line Whig in politics until his party dissolved, afterward being a Re- publican. He died in Camden, Oneida county, in 1871. He was a communicant of the Prot- estant Episcopal church. He married Catlı- erine Moore, who died at Amboy, in 1854. Children : Ann, John, William, Francis, George H. (mentioned below), Elizabeth, James, Lucy, Samuel and Joseph.
(II) George H., son of Francis Wilson, was born in Amboy, New York, March 21, 1836. His early life was spent in farm work on the homestead and in the district schools of his native town. At the age of seventeen he began work as a cooper, and afterward engaged, on his own account, in the lumber business, which he followed for fifteen years on a large scale and with much financial success. In 1871 he established a general store at Glenmore, and a year later removed to Taberg, Oneida coun- ty, where he continued in the same line of business, and, for twenty years, was a prosper- ous and influential merchant. In the mean- time he established a canning factory at Ta- berg and built up an extensive business in that line : in 1889 he built another canning factory at Mexico, and conducted that in connection with his other business. In 1902 he came to Mexico, and since then has made his home in that town. In 1909 he sold an interest in his business at both places and retired from active labor, devoting himself to the care of his property and enjoying some well earned leisure. He was one of the reorganizers of the First National Bank of Mexico, and has been its president since then. In politics he is a Republican, and while living in the town of Ansville, Oneida county, was elected super- visor, and has been a trustee, and, for five years, president of the incorporated village of 19
Mexico. Mr. Wilson commands the respect and confidence of the entire community, and is counted among the leading men of the town. Kindly and generous by nature, he has always given freely of his means to help the unfor- tunate, and contributes generously to the vari- ous charitable organizations of the town. He is a trustee of the Methodist Episcopal church.
He married, November 30, 1870, Mrs. Mary W. Sanders, widow of Lucian Sanders. She was born in Berkshire county, Massachusetts, August 14, 1831, daughter of John and Maria ( Baldwin) Driggs; her father was born in Berkshire county ; her mother, Mary (Bald- win), was a daughter of James and Mary Baldwin, of an old and prominent New Eng- land family. James Baldwin was a soldier in the revolutionary war, and, for many years, was a representative to the Massachusetts gen- eral court: two of his sons were soldiers in the war of 1812. In 1839, John Driggs, his wife and children, came to Oswego county. New York, traveling in wagons and sleds, and settled first three miles southeast of the town of Mexico, removing afterward to Colosse, a sinall settlement in the town of Mexico, where he lived for many years. The discovery of gold drew him to California in 1849, but he returned in a short time. Although too old to enlist in the civil war, he was active in secur- ing recruits and in otherwise supporting the Union. Mr. Driggs spent his last years on a farm, a mile south of the village of Mexico, where his wife died in 1867, and he died in 1883. Mr. and Mrs. Driggs had three chil- dren. John. James, and Mary, who married as stated above.
SULLIVAN John Sullivan, a native of Ireland, came to this country when a young man and locat- ed in Fulton, New York. His father and an- cestors lived and died in Ireland. For many years he worked in the mills at Fulton and died there, August 6, 1876. He married Tulia Barry. Children : Nellie, married Thomas McGovern : Jennie : Margaret, married John Goss ; Dennis M., proprietor of a drug store at Oswego Falls, New York : John R., mentioned below.
John R. Sullivan. son of John Sullivan, was born in Holyoke, Massachusetts, October 10, 1862, and, when a young child, was brought, by his parents, to Fulton, New York, where he was educated in the public schools. At the age of sixteen he became a clerk in the dry goods
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and grocery store of Howe & Dexter, and con- tinued with that concern for five years. As soon as he was of age he started in business on his own account at Oswego Falls. He start- ed his present business in Fulton, in 1886, in a small store in the Emeny block, on the west side. His affairs prospered, and, three years later, he erected the handsome and commodious building at the corner of West Broadway and Second street, and occupied, at first, only the ground floor. In a few years, however, he added furniture and other departments and occupied the entire building, in the meantime. trebling his force of clerks. He also organized a very efficient and well-equipped delivery serv- ice. In the course of time, he found it neces- sary to again enlarge his quarters, and, in 1908, he erected the furniture annex, a large build- ing with five floors and basement, and, in 1911, on account of increasing trade, he added a farge and well-equipped basement in the main store. The main floor of the store presents the attractive features of the modern depart- inent store, showing, on one side, notions, men's and women's furnishing goods, jewelry. cut glass and other glassware, and underwear, on the other, dress goods, table linen, ladies' coats and suits, and domestic goods in great variety. A balcony is devoted to china and glassware, French clocks, novelties and all sorts of bric-a-brac. The general and private offices of Mr. Sullivan are also on this floor. The second floor of the main store is devoted to parlor and upholstered furniture. carpets, rugs, curtains, shades, pianos and other musi- cal instruments and a well-stocked art depart- ment. The third floor is also part of the furni- ture department, with a well-selected stock of dining tables, buffets, sideboards, chairs and other furniture; for the bedroom, iron, brass and wooden bedsteads and accessories, dress- ers, commodes, chairs, etc. The sewing ma- chines are shown on this floor. A feature of this part of the store is the complete furnish- ing of a parlor, a dining-room, a library and a bedroom, the settings being changed from week to week. Mr. Sullivan makes a specialty of the Globe-Wernicke sectional book cases and modern office equipment. The furniture annex is located at the corner of West Sec- ond and Voorhees streets. The building is forty by fifty-four feet. Here all the goods for the furniture department are received by freight and made ready for the salesrooms. The first floor is a showroom for buffets, dress-
ers, desks, sideboards and dressing tables, and a great variety is kept in stock. The second floor is given up to the bulky material, such as mattresses, iron bedsteads, and to the picture framing room. Rocking chairs, sofas, couches, clavenports and similar goods are stored on the third floor of the annex, and refrigerators, coolers, kitchen cabinets and similar goods on the fourth floor. A total of sixteen thousand feet of floor space are in use, and this is the largest department store in Oswego county, and perhaps in northern New York.
Mr. Sullivan is not only a very successful and enterprising merchant, but a citizen of public spirit and usefulness. He has been president of the Chamber of Commerce, is an active member of the Boost Club, the name of which indicates its public-spirited purposes. He is treasurer of the Aluminum Manufactur- ing Company, and one of the directors of the Oswego County Independent Telephone Com- pany. Ile was appointed postmaster of the west side, in 1885, and served four years, and again, in 1892, he was appointed and served another term of four years. In politics he is an influential Democrat, with independent ideas. For four years he was town clerk and at present is a member of the board of educa- tion of Fulton. He is a director of the First National Bank, and a trustee of the Fulton Sav- ings Bank. In religion Mr. Sullivan is a Roman Catholic, and a generous supporter of the Church of the Immaculate Conception, of which he is a communicant. He is a member of the Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks, the Knights of Columbus, and of the Improved Order of Red Men.
John R. Sullivan married, July 14. 1909. Ann M. Satterlee, a native of Providence, Rhode Island.
Patrick Bulger was the son of BULGER a well-to-do farmer and was born in Castle Corner, county Queen, in the eastern part of Ireland, August 17, 1806. He was educated in the schools of his native place. In 1844 he, with his wife and family and possessions, came to this country and made his home in Volney, Oswego coun- ty, New York, where he bought a farm and conducted it for a number of years. He pros- pered and became one of the representative men of the community. About ten years be- fore he died, he sold his farm and sought a home for his declining years. He purchased
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a place on the west bank of the Oswego river. about five miles from the city of Oswego, in a beautiful location, and since his death the property has remained in the possession of his family. Here he continued to follow agricul- ture and having the skill and the means to fol- low out his ideas successfully he added ma- terially to his fortune. He died August 3. 1880.
He married, in his native land. Bridget Mur- phy, an accomplished and cultivated young woman, who was educated in the excellent schools of her native town, and at Dublin Seminary. Her fine character and liberal edu- cation fitted her admirably for her duties as wife and mother and she succeeded in making a model home for her family. She died at Oswego, October 20, 1879. Children : 1. Child. died in infancy, in Ireland. 2. Patrick F., born in Ireland, formerly recorder of the city of Utica, New York. 3. Hon. Charles N., born in Volney, New York, recorder of the city of Oswego for many years. 4. Dr. William James, mentioned below. 5. Mary. born in Ireland, married Michael Hennessy. of Oswego. New York.
(II) Dr. William James Bulger, son of l'at- rick Bulger, was born in Volney, near the village of Fulton, Oswego county, New York. May 28, 1867. In his youth he hal all the educational advantages possible. He attended the public schools of his native town and then took a course at Falley Seminary, in Fulton. and entered the State Normal School, at Os- wego, New York. He decided upon medicine for his profession and began to study under Dr. Ira L. Jones, of Minetto, New York, and afterward continued under the instruction of Dr. James A. Milne, of Oswego. In 1879 he entered the Long Island College Hospital, of Brooklyn, where he spent a year. During the following year he was a student in the Medical School of the University of Michigan, at Ann Arbor. He returned to complete his course in the Long Island Hospital, however, and was appointed assistant to the noted anatomist. Dr. Carden L. Ford. He received his degree from the Long Island College Hospital. June 15. 1882, exceptionally well equipped for his pro- fession. He was admitted to partnership by his former preceptor at Oswego, Dr. Milne, and the medical firm continued with abundant success until Dr. Milne retired shortly before his death, in 1887. Dr. Bulger rose steadily in
his profession and attained high rank. He be- came recognized as one of the most skillful surgeons in this section, and no physician is held in higher estimation either by patients or by the medical fraternity. In later years he has been called in consultation in most of the cases of peculiar difficulty and his reputation has not been confined to this locality. Natur- ally a student, Dr. Bulger has not confined his researches and reading to medicine and sur- gery, but has made natural science of all branches a life study. In politics he is a Dem- ocrat, and was elected mayor of Oswego in 1892. While filling that office he was appoint- ed collector of customs at port of Oswego, by President Cleveland. In religion he is a Roman Catholic, member of St. Mary's Catholic Church, of Oswego. He is a member of the State Medical and County Medical societies. and consulting physician to Oswego Hospital. Hle was a member of New York National Guard, at Oswego, the Forty-eighth Separate Company, and for fifteen years was surgeon of the company. At the beginning of the Spanish-American war he was appointed, by Governor Black, surgeon of Third Regiment. National Guard of New York, and retired with rank of major.
He married, August 20, 1883. Mary Cusick. born in Oswego. New York, daughter of Frank and Elizabeth (Ging) Cusick. At the time of her marriage Mrs. Bulger was princi- pal of one of the public schools of the city of Oswego. Their only child, Charles William. born July 13, 1884, died aged fourteen months.
William McCarthy, born in MCCARTHY Ireland, came to this coun- try when a young man and made his home in Oswego county, New York. He married Sarah Wallace, who was born in Scotland, and came, with her family, to New York state, when she was a girl. They were married in Oswego. Children: William A .. James 11., John, Margarette, Sarah. Kitty.
( 11) William A., son of William McCarthy. was born in Oswego, New York, in 1837. He received his early education in the public schools, and in boyhood began the life of a mariner on the Great Lakes, and became a master mariner, and. for many years, was familiarly known as "Captain McCarthy." He commanded many vessels and owned a num- ber. After he left the navigation business he
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was traveling salesman for the Kingsford Starch Company. He married, in 1862, Nancy Maria Hubbard, who was born in 1843, in Cummington, Massachusetts, daughter of Sam- uel Porter and Vanila ( Mitchell ) Hubbard. Children : Albert F., mentioned below ; Sarah Josephine, born in Oswego, married Harry P. Penfield, of Oswego county, and resides at present at Ridley Park, Pennsylvania ; Will- iam N., born in Oswego, in 1871, married Jessie Durey, he is in partnership with his brother.
(III) Albert F., son of William A. Mc- Carthy, was born in Oswego, New York, May 3, 1863. He received his education in the public schools of his native place. After leav- ing school he became a salesman in a boot and shoe house, engaged in the wholesale trade. In 1883 he succeeded to the ownership of the business, in partnership with Charles North and William A. McCarthy, his father, under firm name of North, McCarthy & Company. About ten years later Mr. North withdrew and the firm became A. F. McCarthy & Company, composed of A. F. and William A. McCarthy. After the death of his father, William A., in 1908, William N., his brother, was admitted. The firm has a large wholesale trade in leather, boots and shoes. Several traveling salesmen are kept on the road. Mr. McCarthy was one of the promoters of the People's Oil & Fuel Company, of Oswego, and is vice-president of the company, which has stations at Water- town and Clayton, New York ; is a trustee in the Oswego County Savings Bank.
In politics Mr. McCarthy is a Republican. He has been active in public affairs for many years, and, in 1909, was elected county clerk of Oswego county. For eight years he served on the fire and police commission of the city of Oswego. He is a member of Oswego Lodge, Free and Accepted Masons, of Os- wego. Ile belongs to Grace Presbyterian Church.
He married, June 16, 1887, Helen Viola Le- Faiver, born in Oswego, May 2, 1864, dangh- ter of Stephen and Esther ( Scruton ) LeFaiver. Children : Albert Porter, born April 25, 1888; Esther Maria, born October 23, 1896. Albert Porter fitted for college in the schools of Os- wego, and was graduated from Yale, in the class of 1910. He is at present in the employ of the Suburban Gas Company, of Pennsylvania, as a mechanical engineer.
Redhead is an ancient English REDHEAD surname, derived from the name of a locality. Places of this name are still found in Forfarshire and Orkney, in the British Isles. The name is found in the Hundred Rolls, among the oldest surnames in the country. Two coats-of-arms are given by Burke. One is described : Sable, a bend engrailed between two cotises, argent : on a canton of the last a saltire, gules. Crest : A sinister arm in armor, proper, embowed in the gauntlet, a sword point downward, argent, hilt and pommel, or, charged above the wrist with a crescent of the last. Another and prob- ably more ancient one is described: Argent, three martlets, sable, a chief, azure. Crest : An eagle's head, azure. The family described in this sketch was located for some generations at Gedney Dyke, Lincolnshire, England.
(I) Richard Redhead was born at Gedney Dyke, Lincolnshire, England, and received his education there. He was ordained as a Wes- leyan preacher, and, for several years, follow- ed his profession in England. In 1840, while still a young man, he came to this country, and located in Central New York. He was a pas- tor of Methodist churches at Waterloo, Bald- winsville, Wolcott, Port Byron and Tully. Skaneateles, Fulton, Liverpool, Rome, and other places in New York state. He married Eliza- beth Barker, who was also a native of England. Children : Sarah E., died at the age of thirteen years ; Nellie, married Samuel Willis, of Tully. New York ; Edwin Richard, mentioned below.
(II) Edwin Richard, son of Rev. Richard Redhead, was born in Brownville, Jefferson county, New York, January 6, 1851. He at- tended the public schools and prepared for college at Red Creek and Fairfield seminaries, and entered Wesleyan University. Afterward he went to Syracuse University, and was grad- uated in the class of 1874, with the degree of Bachelor of Arts. He studied law for a time, but on account of impaired eyesight gave up his professional career and became a travelling salesman for the F. G. Weeks Paper Manu- facturing Company, of Skaneateles. In 1880, with Mr. F. G. Weeks, he was one of the founders of the Victoria Paper Mills Company, of Fulton ; he became secretary and treasurer of the corporation, and since 1891 has been its president. Since 1898 he has been president of the Citizens' National Bank. He is presi- dent of the board of trustees of the Fulton
E. R. Redhead
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Public Library, and trustee of Syracuse Uni- versity, the Cazenovia Seminary, and the Thousand Islands Park Association. For the past thirty years one of the leading business men of Fulton, he has ever taken an active part in the development of the city, and in promoting its growth and prosperity, giving Itis best effort to the advancement of all bene- ficial improvements. His unselfish support of public interests has been frequently given, in face of strenuous opposition, but in every instance his views and actions have found ample vindication in the accomplished results. This was fully manifested in the sewage and waterworks enterprises, which were closed up to the full satisfaction of the entire community. He has been active in promoting various im- portant industries. He promoted the develop- ment of water power at the West End upper (lam, and, with Mr. Weeks, organized the Os- wego Falls Pulp & Paper Company, and built its plant-one of the most important manu- factories in all this region, and assisted ma- terially in building up the Victoria Paper Mills. He was personally the moving spirit in the development of industries across the river, at the lower dam, devoting to it much of his time and capital. For five years he was president of the Chamber of Commerce, of Fulton, and. during his administration, the act was passed to consolidate the villages of Fulton and Os- wego Falls, and the project had his hearty support. He was one of the original sewer commissioners of the city, having charge of the installation of the city sewerage system. When the question of the city (then a village) acquiring ownership of the waterworks was brought forward, a citizens' committee of in- vestigation was appointed, of which he was chairman, the other members being Abram Emerick and J. A. Foster. The committee made an exhaustive report, and of such con- vincing nature that the people voted favorably by a strong majority. Their views were amply vindicated. the waterworks having proven one of the best investments of the city ever made, and one which will be liberally productive of revenue to the city for years to come. It is conceded that Mr. Redhead was the moving spirit in this important enterprise.
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