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 II > Part 68
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HICKEY Robert Hickey, the first mem- ber of this family of whom we have definite information, was a farmer in Tipperary, Ireland. His wife's name is unknown. Children: John; Robert ; Frank: James; Richard; William; Michael, referred to below; Bridget ; Ellen.
(II) Michael, son of Robert Hickey, was born in Tipperary, Ireland, and died there. He served on the police force of Tipperary, and was promoted sergeant and held the of- fice until he was pensioned off, and retired to a small farm. He married Ann Stack. Chil- dren : John, married Elizabeth O'Hare; Mary Ann, married James O'Leary; Robert, re- ferred to below ; William ; Bridget.
(III) Robert, son of Michael and Ann (Stack) Hickey, was born in Cork, Ireland, April 22, 1847, and is now living in Olean, Cattaraugus county, New York. He was a shoemaker by trade, and in 1865 he emigrated to New York City in the steamer "Calabria." From there he went on a visit to Canada to see an uncle, and remained there for two years in the lumber business, after which he removed to Titusville, Pennsylvania, and went to work for the Standard Oil Company, with whom he remained until 1905, being employed in posi- tions of responsibility in different departments. In 1880 he was sent by them to Olean, New York, where he has remained ever since. In 1905 he resigned his position with the Stand- ard Oil Company, and took a position with his
sons. The family are Roman Catholic in re- ligion, and Democrats in politics. Mr. Hickey is a member of the C. M. B. A. He married, September 22, 1874, Ellen, daughter of James and Johanna (Fahn) Barry, who was born in Cork, Ireland, in 1851, and is now living in Olean. Her father, James Barry, was an only child, and lived in Cork, where he was a shoemaker and a farmer. Her mother, Joanna, was a daughter of Homer (Ratterly) Fabn, and granddaughter of Donald and Ellen (Lane) Fahn. Chil- dren of James and Joanna (Fahn) Barry : Nora, married John Deegan; Ellen, referred to below and above; Mary, married Jeremiah Ford: Johanna, James, Michael and Bridget, all died in infancy ; Ellen (Barry) Hickey, came over to America in 1865, in the steamer "Edinboro," and was seven weeks in making the voyage. She remained in New York for seven years, and then went to Titusville, Pennsylvania, where she met Mr. Hickey. They are charming people to meet. Children of Robert and Ellen (Barry) Hickey, three born in Titusville and one in Olean: 1. John, born September 30, 1875. learned the iron molders' trade ; married, September 23, 1903, Harriet Carr; children: Helen, born Novem- ber 5, 1904; James, born June 6, 1908. 2. William, born October 14, 1876; is in with Robert ; for six years he was a member of the board of aldermen of Olean, and identi- fied with many other industrial interests of the city. 3. Robert E., referred to below. 4. Anna, born July 6, 1882 ; married, October 4, 1911, Daniel O'Connell.
(IV) Robert E., son of Robert and El- len (Barry) Hickey, was born in Titusville, Crawford county, Pennsylvania, October 2, 1878, and is now living in Olean, Cattaraugus county, New York. With his brothers he re- ceived his education in the public schools of Olean. He and his brother, William, both learned the trade of steam fitter and plumber. In March, 1905, the two brothers founded the Olean Plumbing. Heating and Lighting Com- pany, later changing the name to Hickey Brothers, which is now doing the largest plumbing business in Cattaraugus county. Their well-equipped store is located at 256 North Union street, Olean, where the com- pany handles all kinds of plumbing, heating and lighting goods, and carries a large and high-class stock. They do all kinds of instal- lation work and employ a large force of skilled
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workmen. There shop is open evenings, and is connected with both phones, and they are always prepared to furnish estimates on any work, no matter how extensive. In addition to their store, they have a warehouse where they carry a large line of goods required in their work. Both brothers are members of the Knights of Columbus and of the Ancient Order of Hibernians. They are Roman Cath- olics in religion, and Democrats in politics. Robert Hickey married Lillian Dorr. Child : Margaret, born in September, 1908.
BENTLEY William Bentley, immigrant ancestor, first appears in this country in Kingston, Rhode Island. He was a currier by trade, and is first mentioned on the records, July 29, 1679, when he and forty-one others of Narragansett sent a petition to the King, asking that "he would put an end to these differences about the government thereof, which hath been so fatal to the prosperity of the place ; animosities still arising in people's minds, as they stand affected to this or that government." He was taxed in 1687. In April, 1705, he had liberty granted by the town to set up a house con- venient for the carrying on of his currying trade. On January 20, 1712, he and his wife, Sarah (Leithfield) Bentley, deeded to their son James one hundred and twenty-eight acres of land : on June 14, 1714, he bought eleven acres, November 1, 1715, he deeded to his son Thomas the eleven acres mentioned above. In 1720 his will was executed and proved, with his wife and son Benjamin as executors. To his eldest son he left five shillings, and a like amount to sons James and Thomas and daugh- ter Jane Whitman. To his wife the remainder of his personal property was left. He mar- ried Sarah Leithfield, and they both died in 1720. Children : William, mentioned below ; James ; Thomas ; Benjamin, died 1744; Jane, married, January 6, 1700, John Wightman.
(II) William (2), son of William (I) Bentley, was born about 1680. He lived in Kingston, Westerly, Richmond, Rhode Island. He was made freeman in 1712. He made his will, August 16, 1748, and it was proved Au- gust 12, 1760. His wife Bathsheba was exe- cutrix. To his eldest son he left five shillings, he having had his share, and a like amount to sons George, Caleb and Ezekiel, and daugh- ters Elizabeth Potter, Tabitha Sweet, Ruhama James and Mary James. He left to his wife
all his household goods and movable estate. His wife was to sell the homestead and house when son Benjamin came to the age of fourteen and divide the proceeds equally among the five youngest children. To his wife was left also the income of the entire estate, to bring up the five youngest children. He died in 1760. He married (first), April 21, 1703, Mary Eliot. He married (second), August 1, 1734, Bath- sheba Lewis, widow of Israel Lewis. She died in 1760. Children of first wife: John ; George, mentioned below; Caleb; Ezekiel; Elizabeth; Tabitha; Ruhama; Mary. Chil- dren of second wife: William, born May 29, 1735; Thomas; James, born June 6, 1739; Greene, March 25, 1741-42 ; Benjamin, June II, 1744. William Bentley and wife, Mary, owned the covenant at Stonington, June 5, 1704, and their children, John and Mary, were baptized there.
(III) George, son of William (2) Bentley, was born about 1705 in Rhode Island. It is said that he married Jane Carson. He settled in Stonington, and George Bentley married there, March 4, 1723-24, Ruth Barber. Among their children was Caleb, born May 20, 1742, settled at Berlin, New York, was supervisor, died there March 5. 1827, aged eighty-four years ; came from Stonington, Connecticut, and settled at Berlin, Rensselaer county, New York ; captain in the revolution under Colonel Stephen John Schuyler, and also served in the Sixth Regiment, Albany County Militia (P. 94. "New York in the Revolution").
(IV) William (3) Bentley, believed to be a brother of Caleb, and son of George Bentley, was born about 1745. Joseph was born in Washington county, Pennsylvania, son of George Bentley, and presumably, therefore, brother of Caleb and William (p. 39, Bent- ley Family). Uriah Bentley, who was a son of Caleb, came from Rensselaer county to Chautauqua county in May, 1810, and settled on lot No. 9, township 2, range 12, on the 'north part of the town of Busti. Uriah was born in Berlin, Rensselaer county, New York, June 21, 1779, and married, December 28, 1800, Nancy Sweet, born May 7, 1779. Joshua Bentley settled in what is now Elling- ton in 1812 and kept a tavern for a number of years ; his son, Joshua Jr., came from Ste- phentown, Rensselaer county, and settled on lot No. 15, September 1, 1815. Gardner Bent- ley came to Ellington or at any rate he bought
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land there in May, 1822. Elder Bentley, bro- ther of Joshua Bentley, settled on lot No. 15 at Ellington (pp. 23-24-25, Bentley Family).
(V) Reuben Bentley, son or grandson of William (3) Bentley, was of the Rensselaer county branch, his ancestors coming thither from Stonington, Connecticut, or the neigh- boring towns in Rhode Island. With various relatives he came to the town of Ellington, Chautauqua county, New York. The records of the town do not give the necessary vital records to establish the lineage beyond a doubt, though there is no doubt of the close relationship of the Ellington Bentleys men- tioned. Reuben Bentley had children: Reu- ben. Calvin, mentioned below; Thomas, Sam- uel, Elizabeth, Mercy.
One account of the family states that Noalı Bentley came from Manchester, England (but it is known that he belongs to the Rhode Island family described here) about 1750, mi- grated to Rhode Island with his family, con- sisting of a wife, sons William and Niles and daughter Polly. The latter "died on the voy- age over." "Shortly after their arrival here another son Noah was born to them." Will- iam, the elder son, removed to New York state shortly after Noah's birth and finally set- tled in what is now New Lebanon, Columbia county ; married a Bromley, and had Noah, Niles and others. One of his daughters, Mercy, married Calvin Bentley, third son of Noah Jr. Niles, son of Noah Sr., was acci- dentally killed in Rhode Island. Noah Jr., when young, settled in Rensselaer county, near his brother William.
(VI) Calvin, son of Reuben Bentley, was born, probably in Connecticut, and died at El- lington, New York, in 1846. He settled in the town of Ellington, Chautauqua county, on lot No. 23, town No. 3, range No. 10, which he purchased of Morse, Beardsley & Stuart, one hundred acres, by deed dated September 8. 1828, for $225. He married, in 1824, Amanda Hildum, born in Providence, Maine, in November, 1808, died about 1881-82, daughter of Samuel and Sarah Hildum. The Hildum family came from Rensselaer county also in 1825, and located in Chautauqua county, New York. Calvin and Amanda are both buried in the Conewango cemetery. Chil- dren: Eunice; Susan, married Lucius Ami- don and had a, daughter Amelia, who married Asa Bentley, now living in Conewango Valley, Chautauqua county, New York; Burton, men-
tioned below; Lorenzo, died aged two years and a half; Betsey, died aged six months ; Drusilla.
(VII) Burton, son of Calvin Bentley, was born at Ellington, New York, and except for about eighteen months resided there all his life. He was educated in the public schools, and bought a farm of one hundred and thirty- one acres, lot No. 57, town No. 3. range No. 10, from Arad Fuller, by deed dated Febru- ary 27, 1864. He was a useful citizen, of sterling character, and commanded the respect and esteem of the community. In politics he was a Republican, and he served on the board of education. He married Sarah Angeline, daughter of Covil and Corlana (Youngs) Nickerson. She died April 24, 1900, aged about sixty-seven years. Children: I. Denio J., born October 2, 1854; now a resident of Ellington : married (first) Josephine Gilbert ; (second) Bird Waggoner; had no children. 2. Calvin Eugene, mentioned below. 3. Addie M., born June 6, 1858 ; taught school a number of years, now a nurse, residing in Jamestown ; unmarried. 4. Effie E., born April 24, 1861 ; married Charles L. Swanson and had Hazel ; they live at Jamestown. 5. Rose L., born February 26, 1869; married Fred J. Naxton ; children: Mabel, Lloyd, Burton, Genevieve and Fred ; they reside at Onoville, Cattaraugus county, New York.
(VIII) Calvin Eugene, son of Burton Bent- ley, was born in Potter county, Pennsylvania, July 1, 1856. He lived during childhood on the homestead at Ellington; he attended the public schools there, the Ellington Academy, Jamestown Union School and Collegiate Insti- tute at Jamestown. He taught school for a short time, and for ten years worked at the trade of carpenter and at other mechanical trades in the town of Ellington and the city of Jamestown. In 1890 he adopted the pro- fession of surveyor and civil engineer, for which he was well prepared, and he was assis- tant city engineer for one year. He has fol- lowed this profession with eminent success to the present time. His offices are in the Cha- daokin Building, and his home at 513 East Fifth street, Jamestown. In 1884 he bought a lot on Eleventh street and built a residence. Afterward he exchanged this property for a lot on Main street, and in 1892 bought house and lot on Crescent street, which was later sold. and finally, after two or three months, removed to his present home. He is a com-
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municant of the Methodist Episcopal church. In politics he is a Republican.
He married, March 17, 1883, at Ellington, Elizabeth T. Currie, born in New Utrecht, New York, daughter of Robert Ormiston. They had one child, Carl, who died aged four months. Mrs. Bentley received a thorough musical education and has taught music in the Institute for the Blind in New York City; also at Culpeper, Virginia, Lawrenceville, New York, and in various towns of Chautau- qua county, New York. Her father was a minister of the Dutch Reformed Church at New Utrecht for more than thirty years.
LIVINGSTON This in an ancient and noble family of Scottish origin, more remotely de- scended from Leving, a Hungarian noble, who came to Scotland in the train of Mar- garet, queen of King Malcolm III., of Scot- land, about 1078. This once powerful family of Livingston through their romantic attach- ment to a "lost cause" (the line of the Stuarts), suffered a complete downfall in Scotland. Sir William de Livingston, founder of the House of Calender, served under Sir William Douglass at the siege of Sterling Castle in 1339. King David, son of Robert the Bruce, granted him the forfeited Calender estates. Sir William afterward married the daughter and heiress of Sir Patrick Calender.
In America the family name is an honored one, and above one of the dormer windows in the state capitol at Albany their armorial bearings are sculptured, a mark of public honor. The arms of the American family are the quartered arms of Livingston of Cal- ender and date back to the fourteenth century. Chancellor Livington stands chief among the chancellors of New York state and is honored with a bronze full figure statue in the state capitol. William Livingston was the famous "war governor" of New Jersey during the revolution. At the battles of Saratoga, eight Livingstons were in command of troops, three of them leading their regiments at critical points of the battles. The history of the fam- ily is a history of over a century and a half of the most exciting and important years of American life. The name is found every- where in honorable position' and all are de- scended from the Rev. John Livingston, here- after mentioned, Robert Livingston, "the nephew," and James Livingston, whose descen-
dants left the Hudson valley, settling in the Schoharie valley and along the upper Susque- hanna. The line of descent from Leving (1068) to Rev. John Livingston (1603) fol- lows by generations.
(I) Leving. (II) Thurstan. (III) Alex- ander. (IV) Sir William de Levingstoune, the first to assume the full name and title, had son, Sir William, who left no issue. The title descended to his Uncle Archibald, brother of Sir William (I). Archibald's son, William, succeeded. (V) Sir William de Livingstone. (VI) Sir William de Livingston, married Christian, daughter and heiress of Sir Pat- rick Calender. (VII) Sir William Living- ston. (VIII) Sir John Livingston. (IX) Sir Alexander Livingston. His estates were for- feited to the crown, but later were restored. (X) James, first Lord Livingston, died with- out issue, the estate going to Alexander, son of Alexander, brother of James. (XI) Alex- ander, second Lord Livingston. (XII) John, third Lord Livingston. (XIII) William, fourth Lord Livingston. (XIV) Alexander, fifth Lord Livingston. (XV) Thomas, third son of Alexander, fifth Lord Livingston. (XVI) Alexander, fourth son of Thomas Livingston. (XVII) Rev. William Living- ston, of Lanark, Scotland.
(XVIII) The immediate English ancestor is Rev. John Livingston, son of Rev. William Livingston, minister of Lanark, Scotland. Rev. John Livingston was born at Kilsyth in Stirlingshire, Scotland, June 21, 1603. He was for a time chaplain to the countess of Wigton, and was shortly afterward installed over the church of Killinchie in Ireland. Be- ing persecuted for non-conformity, he deter- mined to emigrate to America, actually em- barking for that purpose in a vessel bound for Boston, but being driven back by contrary winds, he abandoned his purpose and settled in 1638 in Stranraer in Scotland. In 1648 he removed to Ancrum, in Teviotdale, where his son Robert was born. In March, 1650, he was sent as a commissioner to Brede to negotiate terms for the restoration of Charles II. After that event, the persecution against him being revived, he went to Rotterdam, Holland. Here he began to publish an edition of the Bible which he did not live to complete. He died at Rotterdam, Holland, in August, 1672.
He married, at Edinburgh, in the West church, June 23, 1635, Janet, eldest daughter of Bartholomew Fleming, of the old Scottish
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family of that name, of which the then head was the Earl of Wigton, who with his eldest son, Lord Fleming, was present at the wed- ding. She was born at Edinburgh, Scotland, November 16, 1613, died at Rotterdam, Hol- land, February 13, 1693-94, and was buried in the French church in that city. Children, fifteen in number, all born in Scotland, except John, the eldest, who was born at Milton, Ire- land, June 30, 1636. The youngest son, Rob- ert, is the ancestor of the American family of Livingston Manor. James, the ninth child, is the father of Robert Livingston, "the nephew."
(The Jamestown Family).
(I) John Livingston, founder of this branch of the Livingston family in America, was a native of county Monaghan, Ireland. He is said, by good authorities, to have been a lineal descendant of Rev. John Livingston, through the latter's son James, who was also the father of Robert, "the nephew," who came over at the invitation of his Uncle Robert, first lord of the manor of Livingston, an immense estate in Columbia county, New York. John Livingston was one of the company who came to the American colonies in 1764, or soon after, with Rev. Thomas Clark, M. D., from Ballybay, Ireland. After a brief stay in Still- water, Saratoga county, New York, where his son, Dr. William, was born in 1768, he moved northward to Salem, Washington county, for- merly called "White Creek" and "New Perth." He served during several brief periods as a private in the war of the revolution. Older brothers of John also came to America and fought in the war of the revolution on the colonial side. He married, in Ireland, a Miss Boyd. Children: John, Francis, Robert, Jo- seph, Benjamin, William and Samuel; one daughter Mary.
(II) Dr. William Livingston, son of John Livingston, "the founder," was born February 15, 1768, in Stillwater, Saratoga county, New York, died May 8, 1860. His birthplace overlooked the later, historical battlegrounds of Stillwater and Saratoga, where many of his name bore prom- inent part. He studied medicine and became a leading physician of his day. His home was in Hebron, Washington county, where he practiced for many years, later in Essex county, New York. About 1830 he came for a time to Chautauqua county, New York, re- siding in Hartfield, but later returned to Essex
county, where he died. At Hebron he owned a farm of two hundred and sixty acres on which he built first a log house, later a frame house, which he kept open as an inn for the entertainment of travelers. He was a promi- nent Whig and represented Washington county in the state legislature four terms. He married (first), March 11, 1790, Sarah Tracy, of Salem, born in Norwich, Connecticut, De- cember 13, 1770, died July 8, 1828. Children : Daughter, died unmarried ; Anna, born May 6, 1795; a son, died unmarried; John Jay, of whom further ; William Tracy, born June 16, 1800; James Gray, March 22, 1802; Jane Ag- nes, July 23, 1804; Sarah Gifford, May 4, 1806; Wealthy Maria, March 13, 1808; Rob- ert Wilson. April 2, 1810.
(III) John Jay, son of Dr. William Living- ston, was born at Hebron, Washington county, New York, October 19, 1798, died August 3, 1890, at Jamestown, New York. He was edu- cated in Hebron and lived in Washington and Essex counties until 1830, when he came to Chautauqua county, remaining two years. In 1832 he located in Venango county, Pennsyl- vania, where for fifty-eight years he was a resident of Shippenville. He was of a studi- ous disposition and mastered a fluent control of both the French and German languages. At that early day capable surveyors were in demand and Mr. Livingston, taking up that study, mastered it and followed surveying and civil engineering from 1832 until 1883, over half a century, when not engaged in teaching or mercantile business. After his eightieth birthday he performed field work with his instruments for twenty-seven consecutive days. He attained the same age as his honored father, ninety-two years, spending his last years in Jamestown with his son, Dr. Alfred T. Livingston. He lived a clean, manly, up- right life and was not only one of the oldest men of Western New York, but one of the most highly respected. He was an active member of the Methodist Episcopal church and a consistent observer of his Christian ob- ligations.
He married (first) Mary Ball, who died six months later ; ( second) Maria Rice, of Wash- ington county : (third) Elizabeth Jane White- hill, born April 8, 1809, near Bellefonte, Penn- sylvania. died June 7, 1886, daughter of Jamies Whitehill, born March 3, 1771: lived three miles southwest from Shippenville, a black- smith and a skillful mechanic. He conducted
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a forge and foundry in Center county, Penn- sylvania, near Bellefonte, where he forged axes and edged tools, marketing them in Pittsburg. He was a man of considerable prominence and a member of the Presbyterian church. He married, January 6, 1800, Bar- bara Milliken, born February 22, 1780. Chil- dren: Samuel, James, Elizabeth, Jane, Mar- garet, Jane and Children of John Jay Livingston by second wife: Dr. James Benjamin, a physician of West Middlesex, Mercer county, Pennsylvania, now aged eighty-three years; William H., of Centre Chain, Michigan, now deceased ; Mary, widow of Isaac G. Lacy, now residing at Warren, Pennsylvania : Harriet Elizabeth, unmarried, resides with her brother, Dr. Alfred T. Liv- ingston. Child by third wife: Alfred Tracy, of whom further. (Name generally written Alfred Tennyson, because his college diploma and that from the medical college were so written).
(IV) Dr. Alfred Tracy Livingston, only child of John Jay Livingston by his third wife, Elizabeth Jane Whitehill, was born at Ship- penville. Clarion county, Pennsylvania, April I, 1849. When he was five years old his par- ents moved to Tylersburg, Pennsylvania. He was educated in the public school and James- town Academy. For a short time he was clerk in the postoffice at Titusville, Pennsylvania. In the fall of 1865 he entered Allegheny Col- lege and having spent one year in teaching was graduated in 1870. He began the study of medicine with his brother, Dr. James B. Livingston, and then studied for a short time with Dr. Benton, at Tarr Farm, Pennsylvania, afterwards entering the medical department of the University of Buffalo, whence he was graduated in class of 1873. He began the practice of his profession in Buffalo, but in less than a year accepted the appointment of assistant physician at the State Insane Asylum at Utica, New York, where he remained five years. He then located in Philadelphia, Penn- sylvania, where he established the first known home hospital for the treatment of those suf- fering from mental disorders. He continued there eight years, specializing in mental and habit cases. In 1886 he located in Jamestown and continued practice in the same specialties. He is a member of the American, New York State and Chautauqua County Medical Asso- ciations. He is an authority in his specialties, and has written frequently on medical sub-
jects. Eight years ago he purchased a fruit plantation in Porto Rico at La Sardinera, near Dorado, where he spends about half the year. His summer home is at Driftwood-on-Chau- tauqua.
He married (first), January 16, 1879, in Williamsport, Pennsylvania, Catherine Packer, born May 13, 1853, daughter of Hezekiah B. and Catherine J. Packer, who died July 13, 1883. He married (second), June 21, 1899, Nellie Elizabeth Hallock, born January 26, 1862, daughter of Rev. William Allen and Clara M. (Hall) Hallock. Children by first marriage: A son, died at birth ; Alfreda, died aged four months. Child by second marriage : Clara Elizabeth, born in Jamestown, May 5, 1900.
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