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 33
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county, where she died August 14, 1885; they had three children: LeRoy, Martin and George. William, the youngest son, was born in Freetown, and married, September 14, 1843, Minerva Randall; she having died June 7, 1861, he married, April 2, 1862, Lodeskia Hall, who died July 6, 1880. He removed to Brocton, New York, where his three children were born. He was a farmer by occupation. He married his third wife, Elizabeth Keys, March 30, 1881. Jeannette, the youngest daughter, married, February 4, 1852, Septi- mus Rice, who died February 5, 1858; she removed to Brocton, Chautauqua county, in 1863, and married (second) George Fitch. He having died September 25, 1869, she mar- ried (third) A. W. Baker, March 31, 1881 ; she had two children, both by her first hus- band.
(VII) Simmons, eldest child of Cyril and Lucy ( Welch) Martin, was born at Mansfield, Connecticut, December 7, 1807. When about six years of age he removed with his parents to Solon, New York. He married, October 27, 1840, Lucy Wildman, who was born Au- gust 25, 1817, and died April 12, 1893. Sim- mons Martin had blue eyes and light com- plexion, and was of medium height and build. He passed his life in Solon and Freetown, pursuing the occupation of a farmer. He died at the home of his son Aldin, at East Freetown, August 16, 1895, aged nearly eighty-eight years. His remains were in- terred in the cemetery at Cortland. Children of Simmons and Lucy ( Wildman ) Martin : I. Jane L., born January 5, 1842. 2. Ellen L., born June 17, 1843; died May 12, 1885. 3. Romelia, born May 23, 1845. 4. Horace, born February 28, 1848. 5. Orville, born August 30, 1850. 6. Aldin, born May 13, 1853 ; died June 22, 1901.
(VII) Giles, youngest son of Cyril and Lucy (Welch) Martin, was born in Solon, New York, May 23, 1819. He married, July 13, 1848, Martha Jane, daughter of George and Johanna (Whitman) Burlingham; she was born in Solon, October 11, 1830, and died July 18, 1889. Giles Martin settled on the old homestead on the main road from Solon to McGrawville, afterwards known as the Cap- tain Peck farm; but in 1850 or 1851 pur- chased a farm about a mile and half north- west of the village of Solon, on which he re- sided for the remainder of his life. He took but little interest in politics, but affiliated with
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the Republican party. His death occurred February 2, 1895, at the age of nearly seventy- six years. Children of Giles Martin and Martha Jane (Burlingham) Martin: 1. Mary Estelle, born November 20, 1852. 2. Sarah Matilda, born January 19, 1861. 3. Will Day- ton, born February 11, 1868.
(VIII) Jane L., eldest child of Simmons and Lucy (Wildman) Martin, was born January 5, 1842. She married Ezra Loomis, Septem- ber 21, 1859, by whom she had one child, Fred, who removed to Oklahoma, where he married and raised a family, and where he still re- sides. Mr. Loomis having been killed in a railroad accident, Jane Martin married (sec- ond) Joseph Wavle, October 28, 1874. She is still living, and resides at McGraw, New York.
(VIII) Ellen L., second daughter of Sim- mons and Lucy (Wildman) Martin, was born June 17, 1843. She married Simon L. Tar- bell January 17, 1867. They removed to Kan- sas, where she died May 12, 1885, leaving two children Alice and Frank.
(VIII) Romelia, third daughter of Sim- mons and Lucy (Wildman) Martin, was born May 23, 1845. She married Jerry Greenman, and removed to Kansas, where she is still living. No children.
(VIII) Horace, eldest son of Simmons and Lucy (Wildman) Martin, was born February 28, 1848. He married, November 29, 1867, Lavinia Underwood, daughter of Alanson and Laura (Stafford) Underwood. He is a farmer and cheese and butter maker by occupation, owning a large farm in Freetown, Cortland county, and a well appointed creamery in Solon. Mr. Martin has traveled quite exten- sively, having made three trips to the Pacific coast. He is a Democrat in politics, and has served two terms as supervisor of Freetown. being first elected in 1889 and reëlected in 1890. He has his full share of Martin energy and industry, and is a leading business man of his town and county. Horace and Lavina (Underwood) Martin have two children : Anna, who married Clinton B. Maybury, and resides at East Homer ; and George, who mar- ried - , and who is now living in Ithaca, New York.
(VIII) Orville, second son of Simmons and Lucy (Wildman) Martin, was born August 30, 1850. He married Helen A. Grant, May 18, 1870. He engaged in farming, living for several years on his father's farm in Solon,
but in November, 1878, removed to Kansas, where he lived until May, 1882, at which time he returned to Solon. In March, 1885, he again went to Kansas, residing there until 1890, wlien he removed to Corvallis, Oregon. About 1901 he purchased a farm of some seven hundred acres in the Umpqua river valley in Oregon, and has resided there until 1911, when he removed to Rosebury, Oregon. He has four children, all girls, and all married and residing in Oregon.
(VIII) Aldin, youngest child of Simmons and Lucy ( Wildman) Martin, was born May 13, 1853. He married Amy Hammond, Feb- ruary 22, 1880. He was a farmer by occupa- tion, owning two farms of a total acreage of over five hundred acres at the time of his death, June 22, 1901, which was caused by an accident in a saw mill owned by him. Al- though frightfully cut, he lived and was con- scious for several hours after the accident. He was progressive in his methods and was successful in his chosen field. In politics he was a Democrat. He had four children : Car- rie, Claud, Grace and Mildred, all living in Cortland county.
(VIII) Mary Estelle, eldest child of Giles and Martha Jane (Burlingham) Martin, was born in Solon, Cortland county, November 20, 1852. She was educated at the Cortland Acad- einy, Homer, New York, and married October 2, 1872, Francis M. Kenyon, son of Samuel and Electa Kenyon. Taking up their resi- dence in Cortland shortly after their mar- riage, they have since resided at that place. They never had any children.
(VIII) Sarah Matilda, second daughter of Giles and Martha Jane (Burlingham) Martin, was born in Solon, New York, January 19, 1861.
She was educated at the State Normal School in Cortland, and the Michigan State Normal School at Ypsilanti, Michigan, where she was graduated in 1881. She taught one term in the fall of 1881 at the Cincinnatus Academy, Cincinnatus, New York. In the spring of 1882 she accepted a position as teacher in the high school of Birmingham, Michigan, remaining there until 1883, when she went to Muskegon, Michigan, teaching there one year. She married. October 8, 1884, Henry McMaster, of Birmingham, Michigan. They first settled in Hudson, Michigan, but afterward removed to Detroit, where they still reside. They have four chil-
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dren: Robert Keith, Harry, Allan and Lil- lian.
(VIII) Will Dayton, only son of Giles and Martha Jane ( Burlingham ) Martin, was born in Solon, February 11, 1868. Early coming to the belief that inheritance of property was an evil which should be condemned by the indi- vidual and prohibited by the state, and being desirous that his personal action should be in accord with his convictions, he at the ac of nineteen secured employment as a farm laborer in the western part of Cortland county, refusing at that time and on later occasions to accept any part of his parents' property. Having saved a small amount of money at this work, he entered the Elmira School of Com- merce at Elmira, New York, in the fall of 1889, remaining there during the winter, and again working on farms in Seneca and Yates counties in the summer of 1890. He reentered the School of Commerce in the fall of 1890, and in March, 1891, secured a position in New York City. He married, February 22, 1896, Alice Masterson, who was born April 10, 1870, daughter of Peter and Margaret (Sheridan) Masterson. They took up their place of resi- dence at llasbrouck Heights, New Jersey, where they still reside.
Mr. Martin was elected secretary of the Hasbrouck Heights Building Loan and Sav- ings Association in 1896, which position he still holds. In March, 1906, he was elected a member of the Hasbrouck Heights board of education, and was reëlected in 1909, in which year he was also elected vice-president of the board. In April, 1911, he was elected president. He has been for many years chair- man of the Prohibition county committee of Bergen county, New Jersey, and a member of the Prohibition state committee, and has been the nominee of his party for various of- fices, on several occasions coming close to election.
He has one child, Horace Fenimore, born June 26, 1898.
Daniel De Witt Harnden was HARNDEN born January 31, 1820, in Victor. New York, and died in Waverly, New York, May 7. 1907. His father died when he was a child ; it is thought that he came from the north of Ireland and was of Norman stock, and that he served in the war of 1812: also it is said that one of the Harnden name was an admiral on the ship
"Constitution." Daniel had a brother David Harnden.
Daniel DeWitt Harnden received a common school education and then studied medicine. being graduated from llobart Medical Col- lege, at Geneva, New York, in 1844. For a time he practiced at Port Byron, New York, and then went to Chemung, New York, in 1847, where he practiced until 1861. He then moved to Waverly, New York, where he remained in active practice until his death in 1907. He was a specialist in electrical treatment for disease, and was considered among the best in the state in that line. He was a member of the Tioga Medi- cal Society, and served as president of that society. For ten years he was county coroner, and he served as health officer for the town for many years. He was a trustee of the Methodist church. He married, in 1844, Mar- tha J. Sayre, of Cayuga county, New York ( see Sayre ). Children : I. Rufus Sayre, mentioned below. 2. Edward C., born March 25, 1847 : married, February, 1869, Belle Saw- yer ; children, born in Carbondale, Pennsyl- vania : Moses, 1873: Florence, 1875: Maud. 1878. 3. George H., born October 9, 1849; married. March 28, 1867 (first ), Ellen Hyatt, ( second ) Carrie Bonnell. Children by second marriage, born in Waverly, New York: May, 1874. and Augusta, 1877. 4. Albert C., born February 14, 1854, died August 26, 1863. 5. Ellen Angusta, born November 3, 1857 : mar- ried, September 4, 1878, E. Clare Vanatta, and she died November 18, 1892.
Dr. Rufus Sayre Harnden, son of Dr. Dan- iel De Witt Harnden, was born in Port Byron, Cayuga county, New York, February 8, 1845. lle attended the public schools and the acad- emy at Red Creek, Wayne county. New York. In 1861 he was working as clerk in a drug store in Waverly, New York, and in June, 1862, he enlisted in the civil war, in Company A, To7th New York Regiment, and was muis- tered out in June, 1865. He served as a non- commissioned officer, and was with the twelfth corps. Army of the Potomac. Later he was transferred to the Army of the Cumberland, twentieth corps. He was wounded in the bat- tle of Antietam, and also at Chancellorsville, and was sent to the hospital at Washington. He was made hospital steward after his re- covery, and after serving two years in the medical department he was made chief clerk in the provost's office.
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After the war he worked for two years as prescription clerk in the drug store of Garretty Brothers, in Elmira, New York, and then went into business with his brother-in-law. J. P. Bosworth, in Loraysville, Pennsylvania, for two years. At this time he gave up the drug business and began the study of medi- cine at Waverly, New York, with his father. and at the Bellevue Hospital Medical College. New York. He was graduated from this col- lege in March, 1873, and began the same year to practice in Waverly. where he has contin- ned to the present time. He is a member of the American Medical Association, and of the New York State Medieal Society, of which he has been president. He has served as vice- president of the Medico-Legal Society of New York City, and has been president of the New York State Association of Railway Sur- geons. He also has been president of the Erie Railway Surgeons' Association, and since about 1884 has been surgeon of the Erie rail- road. He is a member of the American Acad- emy of Railroad Surgeons, of the Interna- tional Association of Railway Surgeons, and of the Elmira Academy of Medicine : and of Walter Hull Post, Grand Army of the Re- public, of Waverly. The offices of president of the village and member of the board of aldermen and of the board of health are all the public positions that he has accepted.
He married. December 25, 1866. Amy C. Bosworth, of Waverly. New York, daughter of John Frank and Ruth Ann ( Perkins) Bos- worth. Children : 1. Louie Amy, married Dr. Charles C. Ammerman, of Washington, D. C., who is in charge of a hospital in Brazil ; children : Ruth, Sarah and Dorothy. 2. Dan- iel DeWitt, died in infancy. 3. Ruth D., born 1875 : married Bradley Phillips, an attorney of Buffalo. New York : have son Philip. 4. Ar- thur DeWitt, born 1879: graduated from Cor- nell College : attorney at Pittsburgh, Pennsyl- vania : married Esther MeKeever: children : Mary and Robert Sayre. 5. Mabel, died in childhood.
(The Sayre Line ).
(I) William Sayre was of Hunwich, parish of Podington, in the hundred of Willey, and in the county of Bedford, England. He died in 1564. and his will, dated 1562, was proved 1564. The will of his widow was dated April 20, 1567, and proved June 2, 1567. Children : Thomas, married Margery -; Alice, married Robert West: Agnes, married Will-
iam Makernes : William, who is further men- tioned below.
( II) William (2), son of William (I) Savre, was also of Hunwieh. He married Elizabeth -, and died before 1581. Chil- dren : William: Robert; Thomas: Francis, mentioned below.
(III) Francis, son of William (2) Sayre. married Elizabeth Atkins, the marriage being recorded in the parish register of Leighton Buzzard. November 15. 1591. He was a mer- cer, or "silkman," according to the tax roll of 1609-10. He lived at Leighton Buzzard. where he died intestate in 1645. His widow was appointed administratrix of his estate in April, 1645. Children, born at Leighton Buz- zard, with baptismal dates : Francis, May 14, 1592: Elizabeth, April 28, 1594: William, Sep- tember 15. 1595. died April 9. 1598: Thomas, mentioned below : Alice. September 3, 1598; John, August 10, 1600: William. September 19, 1602: Abel. September 26, 1604: Daniel. October 23. 1605; Rebecca. April 10, 1608: Johannes, January 13, 1610-11 : Sara. October 4. 1612, died February 2, 1612-13: Tobias, baptized December 15. 1613. There was also a child Mary, who married in London, June 8, 1639, Edward Tynge. merchant, who went to America. At Bedford the name Johannes is Job, January 3, 1610, and doubtless the last is correct. as the present register at Leighton is not the original.
(I\') Thomas Sayre, the immigrant ances- tor, was son of Francis Sayre, and was bap- tized at Leighton Buzzard. July 20, 1597. Though it has been a tradition that he worked in the mint before coming to America, that has been proved wrong. He was nearly forty years of age when he left there to come to America, and he doubtless married there and had children born there. The first record found of him is at Lynn, Massachusetts, in 1638. but it is not known when he sailed or when he settled at Lynn. In 1638 he was granted sixty acres, and Job Sayres was also granted the same amount. He and Job also were among the eight who purchased a sloop for the transportation of their families to Long Island, where Lynn was making a new settlement. Before sailing the proprietors sold their interest in the vessel to David Howe. who was to make three trips annually for two years in order to bring their goods to the new settlement. They began to settle at Manhas- set, at the head of Cow Bay, or Schout's Bay.
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but this land was already taken by the Dutch and they were ordered to leave it. Then they sailed to Peconic Bay, landing at what is now North Sea, near the village of Southampton. The first settlement was about three-quarters of a mile from the present village of South- ampton, and is now called "Old Town." They remained here about eight years, and in 1648 Thomas Sayre built his house, which is un- doubtedly the oldest English house on Long Island or in New York state. It was owned by the Sayre family until 1892, when it was sold, and now belongs to Captain Larry, son of Mrs. Sarah (Sayre) Larry; it is still a habitable house, and the frame and chimney are as they were originally. Thomas Sayre was very prominent among the settlers, often acting on committees for the town. He was one of three townsmen, October 6, 1654. He was ordered by the general court, October 23. 1650, to train the town soldiers. On June 19, 1657, he was one of five who were to lay out roads and view fences. He was a generous man. as is shown by the fact that when con- tributions were made, February 4, 1656, for Goodman Gouldsmith, whose house had been burned by the Indians, only one gave more than he did. He served as juror nine times between September, 1653, and September, 1658. He received several lots of land in the divisions. He was a farmer and a tanner. In 1667 he gave five acres to each of his four sons, and he died in 1670. His will, dated September 16, 1669, was executed by his son Job Sayre. Children, some probably born in England: Francis, mentioned below ; Daniel, married Hannah Foster and Sarah -; Jo- seph, married Martha - -: Job, married
Sarah -, and Hannah Raynor Howell ; Damaris, married David Atwater ; Mary, mar- ried Benjamin Price : Hannah, under eighteen in 1669: daughter, married Edmund Howell. (All except last given in order of will. )
(V) Francis (2), son of Thomas Sayre, was born probably in Bedfordshire, England. and lived at the North End in Southampton. Long Island. His name was on the list of inhabitants in 1657, and in Whaling Squad- ron, Fifth Ward, in 1657 and 1667. In 1668 he signed the call for a meeting on reception of Governor Lovelace, and in 1683 his name was on the tax levy. He was chosen overseer, April 1, 1681, and trustee of Southampton April 4, 1693. On February 5, 1694, he deeded three acres of land to Job Sayre, and also
again March 22, 1096, a large amount of land. He died January 20, 1698, and his will, dated January 14, 1697, proved September 20, 1698, made his son Ichabod executor. He married Sarah Wheeler, doubtless daughter of Thomas and Alice Wheeler, of New Haven, Connecti- cut. She married ( second) Josiah Stanbor- ough. of East Hampton, Long Island, and died about December, 1673. Children : Joshua ; John, born January 6, 1665 ; Thomas, 1667; Francis, June 17, 1669, at Southamp- ton ; Jonathan : Damaris : Caleb ; Ichabod, men- tioned below.
(VI) Ichabod, son of Francis (2) Sayre. is mentioned in a list of inhabitants of South- ampton, in 1698. He was part owner of a whaler, April 18. 1711. On April 7, 1712, at a meeting in Southampton to settle rights in common, he and Thomas Sayre each re- ceived one-quarter by Samuel Cooper. He was elected clerk and constable at Southamp- ton, April 6, 1725, and in April, 1730-33-37-41 was trustee. He married, at New London, Con- necticut, in 1697, Mary, daughter of Hugh and Jane Latham Hubbard of Derbyshire, England; she was born November 17, 1674. Children : Ichabod, mentioned below ; Anna- nias ; Stephen ; Abraham.
(VII) Ichabod (2), son of Ichabod (I) Sayre, was born at Southampton, and in the census of 1776 he had a household of one male over fifty. one between sixteen and fifty, and two females between sixteen and fifty. He lived west of Watermill in 1776. On April 3, 1750, he was elected trustee of Southampton and served for four years; he was fence- viewer in 1758-50. He died in 1782, and his will, dated June 1, 1776. proved July 3, 1782, shows that he was a husbandman of South- ampton. In it he bequeathed to his son Icha- bod land bought of Lemuel Wick, and other land to be divided between Ichabod and Ste- phen ; he also mentioned his daughters Eliza- beth and Eunice, son Joshua, and children of his daughter Mary. He married Elizabeth -, who was living in 1776. Children : Ichabod; Mary : Stephen : Elizabeth ; Ennice ; Joshua, mentioned below.
(VIII) Joshua, son of Ichabod (2) Sayre. probably married (first) Martha, daughter of Joshua Halsey and his wife Martha Williams. daughter of Abraham Williams, who died be- fore 1754. when Halsey's children divided the land. He married (second) Elizabeth, daugh- ter of Samuel and Abigail Cooper. His will.
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dated June 19, 1806, proved June 1, 1816, be- queathed to sons Joshua, Caleb, Silas, Enoch, and Thomas : to grandsons James Sayre and Rufus Sayre ; he appointed his son Rufus and friend William Herrick joint executors. Chil- dren : Sarahı; Joshua, mentioned below ; Edith; Paul, born October 22, 1760; Silas; Caleb, September 17, 1764; Thomas, 1767 ; Eunice : William; Enoch, March 31, 1770; Rufus : Ruth.
(IX) Joshua (2), son of Joshua (1) Sayre, was born August 18. 1755, in Southampton. He was a ship carpenter and farmer at New Windsor, Orange county, New York. He was highway master there in 1778-85. He served in the revolution as an ensign in the Orange county regiment, and in 1832 was on the United States pension roll. At that time he was living in Cayuga county, New York, and probably died that year. He married, February 20. 1777, Dency Harlow, at New Windsor. Children: Nathan Harlow, men- tioned below; James, baptized July 30, 1784; Thomas, born about 1780; William, October 21. 1788.
(X) Nathan Harlow, son of Joshua (2) Sayre, was born about 1778, and baptized March 6, 1780, at New Windsor, Orange county. New York. He was a sea captain, and lived on a farm in New Windsor. He was a vestryman of St. Thomas' Episcopal Church, Newburg, New York, at its organization. April 8, 1818. He sold his farm May 1, 1823. and moved to Victory, Cayuga county, New York, where he died March 25, 1849. He married Jane Telford, who was born about 1774, and died September 14, 1862. Children : Sarah Ann, born September 4. 1802; Nancy Telford, August 8, 1804; Harriet, November 22, 1807, at New Windsor ; Margaret ; Walter H., December 25, 1806; Martha J., January 31, 1820. married, January 27, 1843. Daniel DeWitt Harnden. (See Harnden. )
The Hanford family is of HANFORD ancient English origin. Wol- las-Hall, the seat of the Hanford family since 1536, stands on the north side of Bredon Hill about one-third of its ascent from the vale of Ever- sham and the whole estate, with part of Bredon Hill, upon which it is situated, is called Wooler's Hill, a name given to it about the time of the Conquest from the great number of wolves that infested the country
at that time. Sir John Hanford, Knight, pur- chased it from the great Lord Burleigh in the early part of the reign of Queen Elizabeth, and since then it has descended in an unbroken line to the present time. The porch has the family motto, "Memorare novissima," cut in the stone just over the entrance door, with the date 1611, but the greater part of the build- ing is much older. The mansion is built of excellent hard stone, and is described at some length in Breton's "Beauties of England and Wales," dated London, 18II.
(I) Eglin (Hatherly) Hanford, widow, came from Sudbury, England, in the ship "Planter." sailing April 10, 1635, stating her age as forty-six in the passenger list, accom- panied by two daughters-Margaret, aged sixteen, and Elizabeth, aged fourteen. She was a sister of Rev. Timothy Hatherly, who also came to this country. She married (sec- ond), Friday, December 15, 1637, Richard Scillis, or Sealis, of Scituate, Massachusetts. Her daughter Margaret married Isaac, son of Rev. John Robinson, the Pilgrim Father ; Elizabeth married Edward Foster, of Scituate. Thomas, the son, is mentioned below.
(II) Rev. Thomas Hanford, son of Eglin Hanford, was born in England, July 22, 1621, and died at Norwalk, Connecticut, in 1693. He remained in England to study for the minis- try, but in 1642 he also came to this country, and completed his education under the tutor- ship of Rev. Charles Chauncy, afterward president of Harvard College. He was ad- mitted a freeman in 1650. In 1652, soon after the town was settled, lie removed to Norwalk and gathered a church there, preaching to this parish until 1693. He was the first minister in Norwalk, and one of the prominent Puri- tan divines of the first generation in New England. He married (first). 1652, Hannah, third daughter of Thomas and Jane Newberry, of Windsor. Thomas Newberry died in 1635- 36, and his widow married Rev. John War- ham, the first minister of Windsor, and she died while on a visit to her daughter at Nor- walk, April 23, 1655. Mester Newberry, sis- ter of Mrs. Hanford, was grandmother of the famous Rev. Jonathan Edwards. Mr. Han- ford married (second), October 22, 1661, Mary, daughter of Hon. Richard Miles, of New Haven, and widow of Jonathan Ince, of that town. Her mother, before she married Judge Miles, was a rich English widow with several children, and her half-sisters and bro-
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