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 III, Part 23

Author: Cutter, William Richard, 1847-1918
Publication date: 1912
Publisher: New York : Lewis Historical Pub. Co.
Number of Pages: 592


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 III > Part 23


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(II) Hon. Stephen Tuttle Arnot, son of John Arnot, was born at Elmira, New York, August 20. 1829, and died there November 18. 1884. He was for many years promin-


ent in public life and influential in politics in city and county, and in fact throughout the state was well known and highly respected. He served continuously a long term in the common council, and was mayor of the city in 1883, serving the unexpired term of Mayor David B. Hill, who resigned upon his elec- tion as lieutenant-governor of New York state. He took a keen interest in the fire department of the city, and while he was on the fire department committee of the council, he was influential in bringing the department to its greatest efficiency. He was on the com- mittee of construction of the Elmira Reform- atory, and was a trustee of the institution at the time of his death, when his brother Mat- thias was appointed to succeed him. He was a Democrat in politics. He married, Septem- ber 17, 1856. Charlotte Hewitt, of Owego, New York, now deceased. She was born De- cember 19. 1828, daughter of Gurdon and Charlotte ( Platt) Hewitt. Her mother was born January 25, 1800 : married in 1821, and died January 16, 1876; her father was born May 5, 1790, died December 24, 1871; the only surviving child of Mr. and Mrs. Arnot was Fannie, born at Elmira, July 4, 1864, mar- ried, April 16, 1885. Warham Whitney, of Rochester, New York: child, Charlotte, born January 27, 1889.


(II) Hon. John Arnot Jr., son of John Arnot, was born at Elmira, March 11, 1831, and died in November, 1886. He was one of the most prominent and highly esteemed citizens of Elmira during his lifetime. His life was full of generous acts and kindly char- ity, and he was naturally a popular citizen. For many years he was a member of the board of education of the city of Elmira, and dur- ing the last three years before Elmira had a city charter he was president of the incor- porated village. He was the first mayor of the city, and was again its mayor in 1870 and 1874 and in 1882 was elected congressman from the district. He was re-elected virtually without opposition in 1884. In October, 1884. he met with a peculiar accident that ultimately caused his death. In opening the doors of the vault in the Chemung Canal Bank, of which he was cashier, an explosion of gas which had accumulated during three days in the bank vault, threw him across the room against a desk and severely bruised and burned him. He lived about three years. He married. June 2, 1858, Ann Elizabeth Hulett, born near


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'Get '11 m Falck


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Horseheads, New York, daughter of Hon. Charles and Ann Elizabeth ( Munson ) Hulett. (See Hulett. ) She died in Elmira. Children of Hon. John Arnot Jr .: 1. Harriet Tuttle, born March 22, 1859; married James Bailey Rathbone. 2. John Hulett, born March 7, 1860, died May 25, 1899. 3. Edward Mun- son, born June 19. 1862, died March 22, 1865. 4. Matthias Charles, born October 27, 1867, died July 31. 1901 ; married ( first ) April 19, 1897. Alice Hale Updegraff ; she died March 15, 1898, and he married ( second) October 3. 1900, Elizabeth Burr Thorne, of Auburn, New York.


( II) Marianna Tuttle Arnot, daughter of John Arnot, married William B. Ogden, one of the founders of the city of Chicago. 11- linois, and its first mavor.


(H ) Fanny Arnot, youngest daughter of John Arnot, was born at Elmira; married (first) Richard Suydam Palmer : children : Walter, John Arnot, and Richard Suydam ; she married ( second) George Griswold Ha- ven. of New York City : one child: Marion Arnot Haven, married Forsyth Wickes.


FALCK Colonel William Falck, son of William and Matilda Falck, was born in Berlin, Germany, No- vember 25, 1837. He received his education in the schools of his native city, and at the age of eighteen went to England, where he spent two years. He came to this country in 1858, and enlisted in the American army as a private in Company F, second United States Infantry. He was appointed sergeant-major in the civil war. for gallantry at the battle of Antietam, he was commissioned second lieutenant, soon afterward was promoted to the rank of first lieutenant, and in 1866 to a captain's commission. He was in the service for eight years, and took a brave man's part in a war that taxed the courage of the brav- est. At Spottsylvania Court House, May 10, 1864. he was severely wounded in the left lung, and for a time was unable to be with his regiment. As a recognition of his brav- ery at Spottsylvania Court House he was brevetted captain, and March 13, 1865, major, in recognition of his part in the battle of Chancellorsville. Soon afterward he was made lieutenant-colonel by brevet. While re- covering his health in 1865, Colonel Falck was sent to Elmira. New York, and stationed at the prison camp. During the next ten years


he was stationed in various southern states and took part in the great work of reconstruc- tion, and was active in suppressing the murderous Ku-Klux-Klan. In 1877 Colonel Falck was stationed in Idaho, where he took part in the campaign against the Nez Perces Indians. In 1879 he had charge of establish- ing an army post at a distant site on the Co- lumbia river, near the Canadian border. The climate was severe, and the exposure resulted in an attack of rheumatism. In 1880 his suf- fering was so intense that he was given a three-year leave of absence from the army. At the end of this period he resigned his com- mission, after spending a quarter of a cen- tury in the military service, the best part of his life. He made his home in Elmira, New York.


In 1885 he became financially interested in the La France Fire Engine Company, and was elected treasurer and general manager. He had been with the Elmira Water Works Company for two years previous. The fire engine produced by this company became one of the most efficient and popular on the mar- ket, largely owing to the sagacity and fore- sight of Colonel Falck, and probably had no superior in the world. He continued as man- ager and treasutrer until 1900, when this con- cern became a part of the International Fire Engine Company. He was with the new com- pany from 1902 to March, 1904, as a general officer of the corporation at the New York office. When the American-La France Com- pany was organized in 1904, he was instru- mental in having the general offices moved to Elmira. He returned to Elmira himself, but resigned from active duty and from that time lived a life of retirement. His health began to fail, and for two years he kept to his home and devoted himself to books and nature. He died February 10, 1909, at his home in Elmira.


Colonel Falck was a member of the Mili- tary Order of the Loyal Legion: of Baldwin Post, Grand Army of the Republic ; honor- ary member of the Thirtieth Separate Com- pany, National Guard, State of New York; member of the Army and Navy Club of New York; charter member of the Elmira City Club ; director of the Chemung Canal Trust Company, and one of its founders. Colonel Falck was a brave, loyal, capable military officer with a long and brilliant service to his credit in the civil war and afterward. He


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was, moreover, an able, shrewd, wise and suc- cessful business man. In politics he was Re- publican, and in religion a Presbyterian.


lle married, July 10, 1867, at Elmira, Mary Bradford McQuhae, born at Danville, Penn- sylvania. October 25, 1848, daughter of John McQuhae, born at Lewisburg, Pennsylvania, February 15, 1816, died at Danville, Pennsyl- vania, August 13, 1849. Her mother was Azubah Baldwin Carpenter, born at Spen- cer, New York, November 13, 1818, died at Elmira, February 15, 1895, daughter of Eli- jah and Elvira (Baldwin) Carpenter. (See Carpenter. ) Elvira ( Baldwin) Carpenter was born October 25, 1790, daughter of Will- iam and Azubah (Seeley ) Baldwin, grand- (laughter of Isaac and Patience (Rathbun ) Baldwin. (See Baldwin.) Children of Col- onel and Mrs. William Falck: I. Frederick McQuhae, born at Atlanta, Georgia, in Mc- Pherson Barracks, July 5, 1874; married The- resa Josephine McGovern, of Lancaster, Pennsylvania ; children: Mary Theresa, Cath- erine, Frederick William, born October 31, 1909. 2. Alexander Diven, born at Elmira, March 7, 1878; married Elizabeth Arnot, (laughter of James B. and Harriet A. Ratlı- bone, of Elmira. (See Arnot and Rathbone ) ; child: Alexander, June 20, 1909.


John McQuhae and wife Azubah Baldwin ( Carpenter ) had three children: I. Anna Z., born April 24, 1844, at Danville, Pennsyl- vania. died December 6, 1888, at Elmira, mar- ried, July 13. 1864, Alexander Diven, born January 22, 1841, died in January, 1888. ( See Diven.) 2. Sarah J., McQuhae, born at Dan- ville. September 4, 1846; married Captain William Mills, of the United States army ; children : Anna McQuhae Mills. married Frederick Bowen Lincoln, and had Frederick Banister lincoln, Jean McQuhae Lincoln, Edith Isabelle Lincoln, Kathleen Lincoln and Anne McQuhae Lincoln; William Mills Jr. unmarried. 3. Mary Bradford McQuhae, born October 25, 1848, married Colonel Will- iam Falck, mentioned above.


John McQuhae was a merchant in Philadel- phia. Pennsylvania, but afterward on account of ill health removed to Danville. Pennsyl- vania, where he engaged in the mining and lumber business and conducted a general store. His father. William McQuhae, was born at Castle Douglas, near Dumfries, Scot- land, married, in Pennsylvania, Deborah Cow- den. William a portrait


painter. His home in this country was in Philadelphia.


( The Carpenter Line).


This family is of ancient English origin, and is of great antiquity in the county of Hereford and other parts of England. The American branch of the family is descended from the family of which the Earl of Tyr- connel was a member. In 1761 the Earldom of Tyrconnel in Ireland was given to a third George Carpenter, and this branch became extinct in 1853. The coat-of-arms was con- firmed to William Carpenter in 1663, in Lon- don, and was subsequently found on the tombstone of Daniel Carpenter, of Rehoboth, Massachusetts, who was born in 1669. The arms: Argent, a greyhound passant, and chief sable. Crest: A greyhound's head, erased per fesse sable and argent. Motto: Celeri- tas, virtus, fidelitas.


(I) John Carpenter, the first of the name found in English records, was born about 1303, and was a member of Parliament in 1323.


(II) Richard Carpenter, son of John. was born about 1335. He married Christina - -- , and they were buried in the church of St. Martin Outwich, Bishopsgate street, London. He was a goldsmith.


(IJI) John Carpenter Sr., son of Richard, was elder brother of John Carpenter Jr .. the noted town clerk of London, whose benevo- lent bequest founded the City of London School.


(IV) John Carpenter was son of John Carpenter Sr.


(\') William Carpenter, son of John, was born about 1440, and died in 1520. He re- sided in the part of Dilwyne, Herefordshire. He is called William of Homme.


(VI) James Carpenter, son of William of Homme, died in 1537.


(V11) John Carpenter, son of James, died in 1540.


(VIII) William Carpenter, son of John, was born about 1540. Children: I. James, inherited the estate of his father. 2. Alex- ander, born about 1560: his youngest child was probably the William of Cobham to whom arms were confirmed in 1663. 3. Will- iam, mentioned below. 4. Richard.


(IX) William Carpenter, son of William Carpenter, was born in England, in 1576. He came to America with his wife Abigail and son William, in the ship "Bevis." in 1638. and


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returned in the same ship to England. He was a resident of London.


(X) William Carpenter, son of William Carpenter, was born in 1605, in England. He came to America with his father in the ship "Bevis," in 1638, and was admitted a freeman of Weymouth, Massachusetts, May 13, 1640. lle was deputy to the general court from Weymouth in 1041-43, and from Rehoboth in 1645 ; constable in 1641. He was admitted an inhabitant of Rehoboth, March 28, 1645, and in June of same year admitted as a free- man there. He was a close friend of Gov- ernor William Bradford, who married his cousin Alice Carpenter. With others he re- ceived permission from the general court to buy a tract of land eight miles square of the Indians, which became the settlement of Reho- both. He was chosen proprietors' clerk in 1643, and served until 1049. He contributed towards the expenses of King Philip's war, and was one of the committee to lay out a road from Rehoboth to Dedham. In 1647 he was selectman. He owned real estate also at Pawtucket, Rhode Island. He was a captain of militia. He died February 7, 1659 in Re- hoboth. His will was dated April 21, 1659, and proved February 7, 1609. He married, in England, Abigail -- , who died February 22, 1687. Children, born in England: John, mentioned below ; William, married, October 5. 1651. Priscilla Bennett, ( second) Decem- ber 10, 1663, Miriam Searles, died January 20, 1703; Joseph, married, May 25, 1655. Margaret Sutton, and buried May 6, 1675: Hannah, born at Weymouth, April 3, 1640: Abiah, born at Weymouth, April 9, 1643 ; Abigail, twin with Abiah, married John Titus Jr. : Samuel, born in Rehoboth, about 1644.


(XI) John, son of William Carpenter, was born in England, about 1628. He married ( very likely ) Hannah ( Hope). He came from England when a young boy, with his father, and went to Connecticut, where he was living before 1646, when he must have been about seventeen years old. It seems that he was in different places in Connecticut several years, working at the trade of carpenter. He had some difficulty with one Gibbons, and was assisted by Thomas Osborn. His brother Joseph appeared as plaintiff at Hartford, June. 1648. In 1660 John bought land in Iemp- stead, Long Island, and in the deed he is called "John Carpenter of Huntington, Conn." In his father's will, April 21, 1658,


he is bequeathed one mare, "being the old white mare," etc., and his son is bequeathed twenty shillings to buy him a calf. John Carpenter was in Stratford, Connecticut, in 1646. Hinman says that John Carpenter, with some twenty others, of Hempstead, Long Island, was accepted as a freeman by the gen- eral court of Connecticut, May, 1664, if he chose to be a freeman of that state. Fle was chosen townsman of Hempstead in 1003, and bought land in Jamaica, Long Island, in 1665. Captain John Sr. and Captain John Jr. re- ceived their titles because of being captains of the Jamaica Fusileers, a military company of that time. McDonald says that Captain John Carpenter Sr. was captain in 1673. He is mentioned in the "Documentary History of New York" as being ordered in 1673, with his company, to defend Fort James, New York, against the fleet of the Prince of Or- ange, at the time of the recapture of New York by the Dutch. Captain John Carpen- ter was a resident of Jamaica before 1664, and was one of the patentees of the town un- der the Dongan Patent of 1680. He and Ne- hemiah Smith were a committee to settle the Rev. John Pruden over the church at Jamai- ca, June 19, 1676. Among the papers of Judge Morgan Carpenter, of Poughkeepsie, New York ( deceased), is the sale of the dower, 1704, of Hannalı Carpenter, of Ja- maica, to her son, William Carpenter. She sold all her rights in houses and lands left her by her late husband, Captain John Carpen- ter. John Carpenter bought a tract of land in Jamaica on which he settled, and this was occupied for three generations by John Car- penters. The last one died young, unmar- ried. Captain John Carpenter's tax in 1683 was on £186, sterling. His will, dated No- vember 10, 1694. begins: "Now ancient, crazy in body, but sound in mind," etc. He mentioned in the will Hannah, his wife, sons John, Hope, Samuel and William, daughter Ruth, grandson Solomon, and granddaughters Abigail and Hannah. He left his carpenter tools to his sons. Children: John, born about 1658, in Connecticut : Hope, probably born in Jamaica : William, mentioned below : Samuel, born about 1666, in Jamaica ; Solo- mon, about 1670; Ruth, married a Ludlam ; daughter, married a Rhodes.


(XH ) William, son of Captain John Car- penter, was born about 1662. He married Elizabeth He died February ( 15),


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1749. He probably married (first) Sarah He lived at Hempstead, Long Island, and was a farmer and carpenter by trade. The Jamaica records, March 14. 1715. show that he and his wife Sarah sold forty acres to Bejamin Wiggins, of Jamaica. His will. in which he freed his slaves, gives to his great- grandson, William Smith, son of John Smith, and to his sons John and Daniel, his carpenter tools. He also mentioned his daughter Eliza- beth Bedell. Children: Daughter, married a Smith; John, mentioned below : Daniel, mar- ried Sarah or Margaret Hall. 1752 : Elizabeth, married John Bedell.


( XIII) John, son of William Carpenter. was born about 1687. In the "History of Or- ange County, New York," he is mentioned as one of the first settlers of Goshen. The John Carpenter who settled there must have been this one, as a John Carpenter of Goshen sold Daniel, the son of William, the third of land given by William of Hempstead to his son John. John Carpenter of Goshen sold land to Daniel Carpenter of Hempstead. April 5. 1751, and this proves that John and Dan- iel were sons of William, and that John went to Goshen when a young man. John Car- penter, of Blooming Grove, New York, hus- bandman, made a will dated September 17. 1707, proved June 27. 1787, in which he men- tioned his wife Rachel, sons Elijah and Will- iam, and grandson Matthew. The two sons were made executors of the will. Children, probably born in Blooming Grove: John. mentioned below: William, of Cornwall, a husbandman: Elijah, of Blooming Grove. near Cornwall, New York: Julia, married a DuBois: Rachel, married probably Edward Howell: Almira, married probably James Horton.


(XIX) John, son of John Carpenter, made his will January 13, 1766, proved October 14, 1767. He was a merchant. His wife was Jane, and her last name was evidently How- ell. In his will he mentioned his wife, son Matthew, daughters Julia. Rachel and Al- mira, brothers Elijah and William, brothers- in-law Hezekiah Howell Jr., Stephen Howell and Charles Howell, sister-in-law Phebe Howell, Susanna Howell and Abigail Howell. His wife, Michael Jackson and Hezekiah Howell, were executors. Children : Mat- thew, mentioned below : Julia : Rachel, died in Elmira, New York : Almira, died in Elmira, New York.


(XV) Matthew, son of John Carpenter, was born September 26. 1759. He married Catherine Mathews, in 1780; she was born in 1765 and died October 28, 1830. He went to Newtown, Tioga county, New York (now Elmira. Chemung county), in 1793 and bought a large tract of land in what is now the center of the city. Newtown creek ran through one large tract of two hundred acres, and on it was the first fulling mill in this part. He also owned a woolen mill. He was a member of the assembly in 1799 and 1823. Ile was a delegate from the county to the constitutional convention of 1821, and while he was in the assembly the name of Newtown was changed to Elmira, after the name of his daughter Almira, usually spelled Almira or Elmira. He held the office of clerk for the county for nineteen years, receiving his ap- pointment from Governor Clinton. He was very prominent in the legislature. He built the first saw mill, wool carding and cloth dressing mill in that county. When in the legislature he rode to and fro on horseback. through the woods, guided by the Indian trail and marked trees a good part of the way. He was appointed state surveyor of public lands in New York, and also appointed general of militia by the governor, after the revolution. Children, the five eldest born in Orange county, near Goshen, the rest born in Elmira : John. born 1782. died 1786: Vincent Mat- thews, born 1798, died 1860, at Dansville, New York: Benjamin Franklin, born 1809. married, 1835, died June 6, 1869, at Ithaca. New York: Elijah, mentioned below : Jane. born January 10. 1791, married Philo Jones, December 31. 1802, died at Seeley Creek. Southport, New York, October 20, 1860; Al- mira, born 1799, married Robert Thompson. of Newtown ( Elmira ) : Eliza Matthews, born March 9. 1797. married Erastus Shephard. December 5. 1817. died January 2, 1872 ; Caro- line, born February 10, 1806, married Mr. Howell, May 1, 1821, and died October 16. 1881 : Julia, born 1792, married Rev. Dr. Will- iam Wisner, 1807, and died at Ithaca, May 23. 1865: Sally, born May 10, 1801. married Mr. Campbell, of Naples. New York. 1823, and died December 9. 1873: Catherine, born No- vember 26, 1786, married Robert Lawrence, July 7. 1805, an 1 died December 3. 1817: Ra- chel, sometimes called Locky, married (very likely) Mr. Lawrence : Hannah, born August 20, 1788, at West Point, married a Mr. Mc-


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Clure, September 8, 1808, and died in Elgin. Illinois, March 1, 1865.


(XVI) Elijah, son of Matthew Carpenter, was born in Orange county, near Goshen, Sep- tember 28, 1793. He married Elvira Baldwin, October 28, 1813; she was daughter of Will- iam and Azubah Baldwin, and was born Oc- tober 25, 1790, and died January 15, 1864. Children: Catherine, born September 21. 1816, married William Green, November 8, 1837, and died January 2, 1842 : William Bald- win, born December 6, 1814: Azubah Baldwin, mentioned below; Matthew, born November 14. 1820, died December 16, 1896: Zerviah, born April 19, 1822, died May 16, 1824; Mar- tha Elizabeth, born February 19, 1824, mar- ried James Carpenter, and died in 1893, in Lowman, New York : Caroline H., born No- vember 28, 1826, married Morris Isham; Grout Baldwin, born August 24, 1828, mar- ried Sarah Fisher at Wellsburg, New York, and died in 1895.


(XVII) Azubah Baldwin Carpenter, daugh- ter of Elijalı Carpenter, was born November 13. 1818, in Spencer, New York. She married John McQuhae ( pronounced MeQuay, Scotch) January 13, 1842, of Philadelphia, l'ennsyl- vania. He was born February 15, 1816, at Lewisburg, Pennsylvania, and died August 13, 1849, in Danville, Pennsylvania. She died February 15, 1895. When two years old, she was adopted by her mother's sister Zerviah. wife of William Maxwell, later of Maxwell Park, Elmira, but she did not change her name. In 1849, after the death of her hus- band, she returned to the home of her adop- tion, where she died. Children: 1. Annie Zerviah, born April 24. 1844, at Danville, Pennsylvania, married Major Alexander Di- ven, July 13, 1864, who was born January 22, 1841, and died January 25, 1887, and she died December 6, 1888, in Elmira ; he served as paymaster in the army during the civil war, and they had three children: John (1869), dicd 1886: George Maxwell ( June 7, 1870), married Cora E. West in 1891 : and Eleanor, born November 30, 1877, who died aged eight- een. 2. Sarah Jane, born September 4, 1846; married, February 25. 1874. Captain William Mills. of Michigan, who died December 30, 1890, was captain of infantry, U. S. A., at Pine Ridge Agency, Dakota ; children: Mary Bradford. born October 25, 1848, at Danville, married, July 10, 1867, Captain William Falck (see Falck ), born November 25, 1837.


(The Baldwin Line)


(1) Henry Baldwin, the immigrant ances- tor, came very likely from Devonshire, Eng- land, and was one of the first settlers of Wo- burn, in that part now known as North Wo- burn. In 1661 he built here the "palatial house which is still one of the most imposing in the town, and which, though with some changes and occasional improvement," has been owned and occupied by descendants for six generations, and is now the oldest dwell- ing in Woburn. In 1820 the house looked practically as it looks now. The north chim- ney, put up by George R. Baldwin, was said to be the first single flue chimney in the coun- try. He designed the chimney caps and built a small addition on the rear of the house. On the south, between the house and the canal, was formerly a beautiful garden with walks and trees, but all traces of it have now dis- appeared. Henry Baldwin was a sergeant of Woburn militia, 1672-85, and deacon of the First Church, Woburn, from 1686 until his death. He died February 14, 1697-98. He married, November 1, 1649, Phebe Richard- son, eldest daughter of Ezekiel and Susanna Richardson ; she was baptized in Boston, June 3. 1632, and died September 13, 1716. In his will, proved April 4. 1698, he mentioned his wife Phebe, sons Henry, Daniel, Timothy and Benjamin, his son Israel Walker, husband of his daughter Susanna, and his grandson Israel Walker, his son Samuel Richardson, husband of his daughter Phebe and grandson Zachariah Richardson, and his two daughters Abigail and Ruth Baldwin. Children: Susanna, born August 30, 1650, died September 28, 1651 ; Susanna, born July 25, 1652 ; Phebe, Septem- ber 7, 1654; John, October 28, 1656; Daniel, March 15, 1658-59; Timothy, May 27, 1661 ; Mary, July 19, 1663, died January 8, 1663-64; Henry, November 15, 1664; Abigail, August 30, 1667; Ruth, July 31, 1670: Benjamin, mentioned below.




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