USA > New York > Genealogical and family history of northern New York : a record of the achievements of her people in the making of a commonwealth and the founding of a nation, Volume II > Part 10
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He married. January 14. 1706-07. Hannal, born January 14, 1687-88, daughter of Jere - miah and Esther Finney. Her mother w .. s daughter of Thomas and Mary Lewis. .. Bristol, then Massachusetts. Her father. Jeremiah, born August 15, 1662. in Barn- stable, Massachusetts, married January ;. 1684; was a freeman of Bristol in Iogo: shipmaster; died at Bristol. February Is, 1748. John Finney, father of Jeremiah Finney, married ( first) Christina who died at Plymouth. September 9. 1649; (second ) June 10. 1650. Abigail ( Bishop) Coggin, daughter of Thomas Bishop and widow of Henry Coggin : ( third ) June 20. 1654. Elizabeth Bailey, who died at Bristol. February 9. 1683-84. The Finney family came from England before 1639: it then consisted of a mother, daughter Catherine. and two sons Robert and John Finney. ( See N. E. Gen. Reg., 1906, page 67.) Thomas Dimond removed from Long Island to Bristol in 1712. His wife died in Bristol. December 22. 1744. Children, of whom the first four were born in Long Island : 1 Rev. James, born November. 1707: men- tioned below. 2. John, born about 1709. 3 Rebecca. 4. Jeremiah, born 1710. 5. Jona- than. born 1713: died February 25. 1797 6. Phebe. born 1717: died September 14. 1790. 7. Lucretia, born 1719: died Janu- ary 31. 1707. 8. Daniel, died December 16. 1797.
(IV) Rev. James (2) Dimond, son of Thomas (2) Dimond, was born in East- ampton. Long Island. November. 1707. FR removed to Bristol. Massachusetts. nov, Rhode Island. in 1712, and was educate. there and at Harvard College, where he graduated in 1730. He was settled as pa- tor of the East Church. Salem, May I !. 1737, and held this parish until his deat !. October 8, 1781. aged eighty-one. He was an enthusiastic indorser of the great reva work of Whitefield in 1743. He preacher the sermon at the execution of Bryan Shee- han, the first hanging since the time of the Witchcraft Delusion, with two exception-
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He preached at ordination of Rev. Enos Hitchcock in Beverly in 1771. Among his children were : James, Jr., born 1750: John, mentioned below.
(V) John, son of Rev. James (2) Di- mond, was a soldier in the revolution from New Hampshire.
(VI) Thomas (3), believed to be son or nephew of John Dimond, was born in New Hampshire, 1785, died at Fort Cov- ington, New York, February 7. 1862. He was a resident of Bristol. New Hampshire. in 1820. He lived in district No. 8, and the bridge at the outlet of the lake, near his house, was called Dimond's bridge. He lived on the west bank of the river. Ahout 1820 he removed to Swanton, Vermont, and in 1835 or soon afterward to Fort Covington. He was a cooper by trade, and also fol- lowed farming. He married. in 1808, Sally, born April 19, 1787. died January 9. 1804. daughter of Samuel Sleeper. of New Ches- ter, New Hampshire (now Hill, New Hampshire). He was born in 1761, and died February 2, 1827 : married Phebe East- man, born April 6. 1763. Children of Thomas and Sally Dimond: 1. Elvira, born August 27, 1809. 2. Frederick P .. men- tioned below. 3. John, March 5. 1814. died in infancy. 4. Phebe S., March 21, 1815. 5. Abigail E .. April 27. 1818. 6. Moses S .. February 13. 1820. 7. Sarah Ann, March 15, 1822. 8. Samuel S .. January 9. 1824. 9. Thomas E .. December 8. 1825. IO. Quinland. October 13. 1829. living at Re- public, Washington.
(VHF) Frederick Parker, son of Thomas (3) Dimond, was born December 10, ISII. in Grafton county, New Hampshire, in the town of Grafton or Bristol. died at Fort Covington, November 6. 1801. He was educated in the public schools. He removed to New York with his parents when about nine years old from Swanton, Vermont. He was clerk in a store in Plattsburgh. New York. in 1835-36. He went to Chicago, Il- Boris. in 1837. an engaged in business as a general merchant in partnership with a Mr.
Winchell under the firm name of Dimond & Winchell. He returned to New York state in 1842 and located at Brasher Falls, where he was superintendent of the Brasher Iron Works until about 1850. He assisted his father in paying for the homestead while he was at Brasher. After 1830 he devoted himself to farming and was very successful. and was active to the time of his death. In religion he was a Universalist. He mar- ried, June 24. 1863, Ellen Kelley, born at Londonderry. Ireland, February 13, 1832. She is living with her son at the present time in Fort Covington. Children: I. Phebe, born March 25. 1864: died Decem- ber 6, 1871. 2. Frederick J., mentioned below. 3. Quinland, March 1, 1870; died October 29. 1871. 4. Mary Ellen, lives in Fort Covington. 5. Benjamin Thomas. April 4, 1876; died .August 6, 1876.
(VIII) Frederick J .. son of Frederick Parker Dimond. was bom in Fort Coving- ton. July 2. 1866. He was educated in the public schools and at the Eastman Business College at Pouglikeepsie. New York. He worked for a year as bookkeeper in the gen- eral store of J. H. Fay at Fort Covington. where he remained from 1889 to 1895. He was then bookkeeper for the firm of J. R. & J. H. Lockwood, dealers in harness and carriages, at Burlington, Vermont, for two years and a half. He returned to the em- ploy of J. H. Fay at Fort Covington for a short time. From 1898 to 1906 he conduct- el the home farm, which he now owns. Since February, 1906. he has been cashier of the Fort Covington Banking Company, of which he was one of the organizers. In politics he is a Republican. He is a mem- ber of the Independent Order of Foresters and of the local grange. Patrons of Hus- bandrv. He attends the Presbyterian church. He married, June 25. 1896. Ade- laide E .. born at Loon Lake, town of Frank- lin. New York, daughter of James W. and Helen Littlejohn. His wife died March 24. [Xg8. They had one son, James Frederick, born April 26. 1897.
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Henry Dievendorf, DIEVENDORF immigrant ancestor, was born in Switzer- land, and came to this country about 1730 with a brother and cousin. From them are descended the Dievendorfs and Davendoris of northern New York. One of the family was killed at the battle of Oriskany in the revolution. He settled at Currytown in the Mohawk Valley. New York.
(II ) Jacob, son of Henry Dievendorf, was born before 1730 in Switzerland and canie with his father to this country. He lived at Currytown, but removed to Root, of which he was one of the earliest pioneers. Children : 1. Jacob, mentioned below. 2. Frederick, killed by a falling tree. 3. Henry.
(III) Jacob ( 2), son of Jacob (1) Diey- endorf. was born at Currytown, New York. September 23. 1769. The federal census gives in 1790 Jacob Dievendort ( probably Jacob. Sr. ) as head of a family in Mohawk town, with one son under nineteen, four fe- males and seven slaves. During the revolu- tion, when he was twelve years old. he was taken prisoner by the Indians and British and in one of the battles was felled by an Indian, scalped and left for dead. The day after the battle he was found and cared for by friends and eventually recovered, living to the great age of eighty-four years. He be- came an extensive land owner and prosper- ous farmer at Root. He married Mar- garet Bellinger and had two sons and three daughters. Ile died at Currytown, October 8, 1854. and his wife about 1842.
(IV) William B .. son of Jacob (2) Dievendorf, was born in Currytown. Au- gust 30, 1805, died March 11. 1882. He was an extensive farmer and one of the first to make dairying a specialty in Curry- town. He was a Democrat and served the town as supervisor. He married Margaret. born November 24. 1811, daughter of his uncle and aunt. Henry D. and Margaret (Lyker ) Dievendorf. Her father was a member of the assembly and county judge. She was one of nine children: Jacob H ..
Henry L., Cornelius, John F., Catherine. Elizabeth, Hannah. Margaret and Fant ... Dievendorf. Children of William B. at. ! Margaret Dievendorf: Jacob, mentioned below : Henry A .. Charles, Catherine, Cha .- lotte, Fannie M., Lydia, Elizabeth, Mar- garet : Margaret died at age of twenty Henry A., born April 9. 1838, manufactu -- er of cheese at Root. New York, and fars :- er, director of the National Spraker Bank : married. December 25. 1874. Tenetta. daughter of Elias and Lucretia ( Wessels , Lasher, of Root.
(V) Jacob ( 3), son of William B. Diev- endorf, was born at Currytown, Montgon :- ery county, New York, November 16, 1834. He was reared on the farm of his father and educated in the public schools. He succeed- ed to the ownership of the homestead after his father and has always lived there. The farm consists of two hundred and twent acres, besides which he owns two other farms, comprising two hundred and one hundred and ninety acres, respectively. He lias made a specialty of his dairy and is par: owner in several cheese factories of the vi- cinity. In politics he is a Democrat and has been supervisor of the town. He is a direc- tor of the National Bank of Fonda, New York. He and his wife are members of the Dutch Reformed church.
He married. January 5. 1865. Lydia. born 1842, daughter of Nelson and Eliza- beth ( Mount ) Shelp. Children : 1. Eliza- beth A., married Howard M. Stowitts. a dentist at Amsterdam, New York. 2. Lu- ella, married Rev. Charles Bedford, paster of the Dutch Reformed church of Curry- town. 3. David. lives with his father on the homestead. 4. Sarah, married Warren Ray Hadsell, of Boston, a writer. 5. Nel- son, died in infancy.
(VI) William J., son of Jacob (3) Diev- endorf, was born in Currytown, Montgom- ery county, New York. September 28, 1873. He was educated in the public schools of hi- native town and at Claverack College on the Hudson, graduating in the class of 1803.
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'le engaged in farming, and still owns two arms in the Mohawk Valley. He embarked in the grain business at Tupper Lake in 1902 under the firm name of De Lancett & Diev- endorf, and since 1909 has been the sole owner of the business. In addition to grain and cement, he deals in coal, fertilizers, seeds and feed of all kinds. He is a direc- tor of the Tupper Lake National Bank and vice-president, and was one of the original board of directors. In politics he is a Demo- crat, and for two years served the town as supervisor, being the first of his party to be elected to that office. He is a member of the local Board of Trade; of Mount Arab 1.odge, Free and Accepted Masons: of Tupper Lake Lodge. Independent Order of Odd Fellows ; also a member of Plattsburgh Lodge. No. 621. Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks: Knights of Pythias, all of Tupper Lake. He belongs to the Dutch Re- formed church. He married. in 1895. Eth- elberta Angell, of Chatham, Columbia coun- tv, New York, daughter of Daniel H. and Katherine ( Mesick ) Angell. Children: I. Evelyn Angell, born at Glen. Montgomery county, September 16, 1896. 2. Helen Eliz- aleth, born at Glen. August 9. 1898. 3. Elith Margaret, born at Tupper Lake. Feb- Tuary 7, 1904.
GENAWAY Jolm Genaway, progenitor of all of the name in this section, was born in Eng- land, and came to America with the British umy in 1812. He served in the English army for fourteen years. . After the war he Jeided to make his home in this country. and settled at Highgate, Vermont, where he married Artimissa Scott, of Highgate, and ter removed to Chateaugay, New York.
( 11 ) Stephen, son of John and Artimissa Genaway, was born in Highgate, Vermont. nd removed with his father to Chateaugay. New York. He attended the common chools and was by occupation a farmer. In Ities he was a Republican from the time ยท i the birth of the party, and was prominent
in its councils. He married Sally Church, of Chateaugay. Franklin county, New York. Children: John, of whom further ; Luther. Samuel, Daniel and Sarah.
( III ) John, son of Stephen Genaway. was born in Chateaugay, New York. April 21. 1845. He attended the common schools, and worked at farming in his youth. He was a farmer for many years in Belmont, Franklin county, and while living there was elected justice of the peace, proving himself a capable town officer and magistrate. For many years he was a keeper in the state prison at Dannemora. He was a member of the Order of Foresters. He married Sarah A., daughter of John and Ann Camp- bell. Children: John William, born July 30. 1873. mentioned below : Allie A., June 25. 1876, died September 16, 1894: Hubert C., born November 9, 1881, a merchant; Harry I., October 23. 1883.
(IV ) Hon. John William Genaway, son of John and Sarah ( Campbell ) Genaway. was born in Dannemora. New York. July 30. 1873. He was educated in the public schools and high schools of his native town, the Chateaugay high school, and at Frank- lin Academy. He then taught school in the vicinity for two years. He began the study of law in June, 1804, in the office of M. E. MeClary, at Malone. He enlisted in July. 1898. in Company M. Two Hundred and Third Regiment. New York Volunteer In- fantry, and served in the Spanish war until March 25. 1899, and was mustered out with the rank of sergeant.
He passed his bar examination in 1898, and was admitted May 2, 1899, immediately afterward opening an office at Chateaugay, New York, where he practiced until Octo- ber 1. 1000. Since then he has been located at Malone. in partnership with John P. Kel- las. This firm has a high reputation and a large practice. Mr. Genaway was elected district attorney of the county in 1967, and now holds that office. In politics he is a Republican. He is a member of Northern Constellation Lodge of Free Masons;
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Northern Constellation Chapter, Royal Arch Masons; Franklin Commandery, No. 60, K. T .; Neshoba Lodge of Odd Fellows : Ne- shoba Encampment ; Court Adirondack Lodge of Foresters, and is high councillor of the high court. Independent Order of Foresters of Central New York. He is also a member of the Woodmen and the order of Maccabees. In religion he is a Methodist. He is a member of the Frank- lin County Bar Association.
He married, July 29. 1905. Madge C. Clark, born August 5. 1879. daughter of Smith and Malvina Clark of Potsdam. New York. They have one child -- Alice, born May 16, 1906. .
Samuel Reed was born at
REED Bridgeport. Connecticut. Octo- ber 31, 1804, and died February
24, 1890. He removed to Lewis county. New York, in 1825, and settled in the town- ship of Lowville, where he worked at his trade as hatter for a period of thirty years. Then he bought a farm, and during the re- mainder of his active life he was a farmer at Lowville. He was a Democrat, and a Free Mason. Ile married. at Lowville. Nancy Bowman, born May 20, 1800. died December 12, 1885. Children: John HI .. born July 20. 1833. died February 20. 1902: Albertus M., June 17. 1831. died December 12, 1901 : Willard V .. mentioned below : Garrett B., July 14. 1838. died August 7. 1902; Francis II., born September 20. 1840: Morain L., April 12, 1845: Morinda. twin with Morain L., died February 8. 1908: Squire, born August 5. 1847, died Septem- ber 12. 1865.
(II) Willard V., son of Samuel Reed. was born at Lowville. April 22. 1836. He was educated in the public schools of his native town, and after leaving school learned the trade of painter and decorator. He has followed this trade as journeyman and inas. ter painter all his life in his native town. and has a reputation of the first order for skillful and thorough work. \ genial, cour-
teous gentleman, he has the esteem of t! . entire community and the friendship of a! who know him. His home is pleasantly 1 . cated on one of the principal streets, and ! . and his family are prominent in the social life of the village. In politics he is a Det. oerat of the old-fashioned order. He mar ried, November 24. 1864. Harriet L. . \r. thur, daughter of Joel and Mary ( Webh Arthur, granddaughter of Elisha and Mar- tha ( Moore ) Arthur ( see Arthur ). Joel Arthur died May 12. 1861; Mary Webb Arthur died November 23, 1849: she was daughter of Joseph and Lydia Ann ( Benja- min ) Webb. Joseph Webb was a soldier m the war of 1812, and his service was patri- otic and honorable. Children of Mr. and Mrs. Reed : Effie L., born September 23. 1865: Mary E .. November 28, 1867; Fred 1., October 17. 18;1: Hattie G .. . April 3. IS76.
Samuel Jacobs was born in JACOBS 1743. died in Cortland. Nev. York. December 31. 182 :. He married, March 30. 1771, at Hempstead. Long Island, Rebecca Seaman, born Feieru- ary 3. 174 ;. in Oyster Bay. Long Island. died in Cortland. January 31, 1814. Child. John, mentioned below.
(II) John, son of Samuel Jacobs, was born February 4. 1776, at Peckskill. New York, died May 18. 1854, in Masonville. He married. February 4. 1801. Elizabeth Ferris, born June 2. 1783. in Peekskill, died April 27, 1866. Child: Ferris, mentioned below.
( III ) Ferris, son of John Jacobs, was born January 10. 1802. in Peekskill, died September 7. 1887. at Delhi, New York. He was a physician, and an army surgeon in the civil war. He married. January 14. 1831. Nancy Lasell, of Schoharie. Nex York. Children: 1. Ferris, Jr .. a general in volunteer service in civil war, a lawyer and member of congress. 2. Timothy La- sell. mentioned below. 3. Lucia. mairie ! T. B Meigs, president of Santa Clara Low-
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ler Company, Tupper Lake, New York; lives in New York.
(IV) Timothy Lasell, son of Ferris Ja- cobs, was born October 23. 1837. in Delhi, and lives at present in Brooklyn, New York. Ile received his education in the local schools in Delhi, and when eighteen years old left home and went into a general store run by his uncle at Guilderland, New York. Here he remained for three years, when he went to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 1859. and went into business for himself. in men's furnishing goods. He carried on a retail business until 1865, when he began the man- ufacture of shirts, and did a wholesale bu-i- ness under the name of Quaker City Shirt Company. The manufacturing plant was in Norristown, Pennsylvania, and his offices in Philadelphia. In 1876 he removed the offices to New York City. where he re- mained until. 1890, when he sold out to Wanamaker & Brown, of Philadelphia. They still continue the business under the same name. After selling out, he engaged in the real estate business in Brooklyn. where he has made his home since. He is now practically retired, but owns some twenty houses in the vicinity of New York and Brooklyn, and spends much of his time in looking after his real estate interests. He is a Republican in politics: in religion a member of the Presbyterian church, and a trustee of the society. He married. in 1864. Mary Elizabeth, daughter of James H. and Maria (Griswold) Wright, and grand- daughter of Henry Wright. She was born in 1843 in Delhi, died in 1876. Child : James Lasell, mentioned below.
(V) James Lasell. son of Timothy La- -ell Jacobs, was born August 1. 1866. in Delhi. He was educated in the schools in Delhi, Delhi Academy, and private schools in Philadelphia. When thirteen years old he went to New York with his uncle. T. B. Meigs, and went to private schools there. also attended School of Languages in New York, which stood on the site of the Times buikling. until 1881. Through his uncle.
Hon. Ferris Jacobs, Jr., who was congress- man, he received appointment to .Annapolis Naval Academy, where he remained for two years. At the end of that time, he obtained leave of absence for a year on account of trouble with his eyes. He consulted a noted specialist. Dr. Agnew, and as a result was obliged to resign from the academy in 1884. He then went into the employ of A. D. Juilliard & Company. 66 Worth street. wholesale dry goods commission merchants. and remained with them until 1891. Then he went into the employ of Dodge. Meigs & Company in the lumber business, in the Tupper Lake region. This firm owned about sixty thousand acres of land in that section. In 1807 the firm of Dodge. Meigs & Company dissolved partnership and the business was taken over by the Santa Lum- ber Company. Mr. Jacobs was made su- perintendent, and has continued in that po- sition since. In 1899 the present mill of the company was built at Tupper Lake. Mr. Jacobs has made his home in the village of Tupper Lake since 1893. He is president of the Catskill Lumber Company and presi- dent of the Tupper Lake Board of Trade since its organization. In company with Dr. Thissell he formed the water company and put in the water system in Tupper Lake. and was president of the company until he sold out. He is a director in the Tupper Lake National Bank, organized in 1906, and is one of the original board. The bank has resources of $220.000 and a surplus of $15 .- 000. In politics he is a Republican : in re- ligion a Presbyterian, and an elder in the church. He married. June 20. 1893. Mary Slade, daughter of James K. and Mary (Slade) Penfield, of Delhi. Children. born at Tupper Lake: Elizabeth Penfield, March 25. 1804: Eleanor Lasell. May 20. 1897: Isabel Kedsie. November 16, 1902.
The parent nationality of McMARTIN the McMartins was Scotch, as the prefix. Mac. would imply, and those of the name re-
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siding in Clinton county are closely related to the MeMartins of lower Canada. Will- iam Alexander McMartin, the present sul- perintendent of the Clinton County Home, possesses numerous characteristics indicative of his Caledonian origin, and his father. Alexander McMartin, of Movers, by rally- ing to the defence of the Union in 1861. exemplifying the martial spirit which dis- tinguished his chivalric forbears.
(I) John McMartin was born in Scotland. and, when a young man, emigrated with his parents to British North America, settling in lower Canada. He later came to the states, and. locating in Mooers. Clinton county, New York, resided there for the re- mainder of his life. His occupation was that of a carpenter and builder. He mar- ried Mary Robare, who was of French de- scent ; children : John, Alexander, Matilda, Henry, James. Julia, deceased. Charles, William, also deceased.
(II) Alexander, second son of John and Mary ( Robare ) McMartin, was born in Mooers, November 30, 1838. In 1861. when twenty-two years old. he enlisted at Plattsburgh as a private in Company .1. Ninety-sixth Regiment. New York Volun- teers, and served in the Federal army throughout the civil war. Instead of being mustered out immediately after the close of the war, his company was retained in the service some time after that event. one of its duties being the taking of the census of Culpepper county. Virginia, and he was finally discharged in 1866, having attained the rank of second lieutenant. Previous to the war he was engaged in various occupa- tions, and after his return from the army he entered the employ of the Delaware and Hudson Railroad Company at Sciota, a vil- lage in Chazy township, as foreman, contin- uing in that capacity for a number of years. From 1874 to 1887 he held the responsible position of roadmaster on the Chateaugay Iron and Ore Railway, and in the latter year he entered the service wi the Boston and Maine Railway, which necessitated his
removal to Nashua, New Hampshire. Some years later he returned to Sciota, and at t .... present time is employed on the state high- ways as an assistant to the surveyor's corp .. He married Flavy, born in Mooers, daugh- ter of Charles and Flavy ( Eryell ) Laundry she died in 1903. Children: 1. William Alexander, mentioned below. 2. Josephine. born in Chazy. New York: married Charles La Flame. 3. Matilda, born in Sciota : mar- ried Ezera Abard. 4. Emma, married Ju- seph Peppin. 5. Julia, born in Sciota : mar- ried J. H. Burnham. 6. Edward A., born in Sciota : unmarried.
(III) William Alexander, eldest son of Alexander and Flavy ( Laundry ) McMartin. was born in Mooers, May 25. 1868. His preliminary studies were pursued in the common schools of Sciota, and he completed his education at the Mooers high school. He then entered the employ of A. B. Angell. of Sciota, and later went to Nashua, Ne .. Hampshire, where he was employed in that city as a clerk in a clothing store. Return- ing to Sciota he engaged in mercantile busi- ness, establishing the firm of McMartin & Fesett, and this concern has ever since con- ducted a general store in Sciota vil- lage with gratifying success. In pol- itics Mr. McMartin is a Republican. He was for one term a member of the board of supervisors in Chazy. and also served as justice of the peace and! commissioner of highways. Elected super- intendent of the Clinton County Home i .: the fall of 1905 for a term of three year -. he was re-elected in 1908. and is still admit .- istering the affairs of that institution in :. most satisfactory manner. He affiliates with the Knights of Columbus, the Benevo- lent and Protective Order of Elks, the M. - cabees, and the Patrons of Husbandry.
Coopersville. New York, June 27. 1801. M. MeMartin married Jane, born in Black Brook, Clinton county, daughter of Patrick and Hannah ( Ryan ) Burke. Children Edward A., born September 10. 1804: Kath !- erine Maria, October 31. 1896; Nora To-
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