USA > New York > Genealogical and family history of western 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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(VIII) Dr. Charles Edward Annabel, son of Frederick L. Annable, was born in the town of Howard. Steuben county, New York, No- vember 7. 1851. He attended the public schools, in which he prepared for college, and entered Cornell University, from which he was graduated with the degree of bachelor
of arts in 1867. He studied his profession in the University of New York and received his degree as doctor of medicine in 1871. He located at Cameron, New York, where he was in general practice for a number of years, and thence to Elmira, New York, where he prac- ticed for ten years. Since 1893 he has been located at Waverly, New York. He is a mem- ber of the Chemung and Steuben County Med- ical societies, the New York State Medical Society and the American Medical Association He is a member of Ivy Lodge of Free Ma- sons, of Elmira. In religion he is a Metho- dist, and in politics a Republican. He mar- ried (first) Clementina Hallet, born at Cam- eron, New York, daughter of Nathaniel Hal- let. He married (second), October 18, 1899. Mary Decker Holmes, of Standing Stone, Pennsylvania, born December 6, 1870, daugh- ter of Edward and Anna (Ennis ) Decker. Child by first wife: Fannie, married James McCready, editor of paper in St. Johns, N. B .; they have one child, John. Child by sec- ond wife: Edward Lincoln, born February 12, 1908.
(VIII) Dr. Frederick Cornelius Annabel, son of Frederick L. Annable, was born in January, 1860, in Howard, Steuben county, New York. He attended the public schools of his native town and studied medicine at the New York University, from which he re- ceived the degree of doctor of medicine in 1889. He located first in the town of Cam- eron, Steuben county, and in the fall of 1890. came to the city of Elmira to practice, where he has since practiced and won high rank in his profession. He is a member of the Che- mung County Medical Society, the Elmira Academy of Medicine, the New York State Medical Association and the American Medi- cal Association. He was commissioned by Governor Roosevelt, in 1900, coroner of the county to fill a vacancy, and at the end of his term was nominated by the Republican county convention and afterward elected coroner for three years. At the end of that term he was re-elected and served in all seven years in thiis office. He was appointed in 1900 to the medical staff of the Arnot Ogden Memorial Hospital of Elmira, and filled that position until 1908, when he went on the staff of surgeons and has continued to the present time. For four years he was health officer of the town of Elmira. He is medical ex- aminer of the Provident Life and Trust In-
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surance Company of Philadelphia, Pennsyl- vania; the Manhattan Life Insurance Com- pany of New York; the Union Central In- surance Company of Cincinnati; the Canada Life Assurance Company of Toronto, Canada, and of other companies. In politics he is a Republican; in religion a Presbyterian. He married, November 25, 1893, Bertha Kath- arine Dixon, born in Pennsylvania, daughter of William Johnstone and Sarah C. ( Wieder- man) Dixon, of Northumberland county, Pennsylvania. They have no children.
(VII) Caleb Annabel, son
ANNABEL of Cornelius (3) Annable (q. v.) was born in Still- water, New York, March 7, 1815, died in Cameron, Steuben county, New York, May 3, 1908. He was an early settler of Steuben county, and was a farmer by occupation. He married Harriet Roosa, born in Canisteo, New York, October 12, 1822, died December 6, 1892, daughter of Minna S. and Mira Roosa. Children: 1. Andrew, mentioned below. 2. Mary Jane, born April 1, 1847; married George Bundy, of Bath, New York. 3. Al- bert, born November 8, 1850, died April 18, 1903. 4. Ida, born August 4, 1857, died April 15, 1901 ; married Daniel Collins.
(VIII) Andrew, son of Caleb Annabel, was born in Howard, Steuben county, New York, June 20, 1845, and now lives in Cam- eron, New York. He received a common school education, and is a farmer by occupa- tion. He has always resided in Steuben county, and has served several times as high- way commissioner, and also as vice-president of the Agricultural Society of Steuben county. He married, July 1, 1866, Amanda French, of Cameron, New York, born June 4, 1850, in Cameron, daughter of John and Mary J. (Overhisen) French. Children: I. Nettie, born October 12, 1867, died Deceni- ber 17, 1871. 2. Charles Caleb, mentioned below. 3. Bert D., born March 23, 1876; United States mail carrier at Cameron.
(IX) Charles Caleb, son of Andrew Anna- bel, was born in Cameron, Steuben county, New York, December 9, 1872. He attended the public schools of his native town and the high school at Bath, New York. He en- tered the Law School of Union University, from which he was graduated in 1901. He was admitted to the bar in July following and was a law clerk in Buffalo for a short
period of time, and afterward in Judge Par- ker's office at Bath, New York. Since 1903 he has practiced law at Waverly, New York, and he has taken a prominent position among the lawyers of the county. He is a member of the Presbyterian church, and of the Inde- pendent Order of Odd Fellows, of Waverly.
Mr. Annabel married, March, 1904, Flora Lang, of Waverly, daughter of Frank Nesbit and Rose (Shackelton) Lang, and grand- daughter of John Lang, of Baltimore, whose father was a native of Scotland and whose mother was from France. Children of Mr. and Mrs. Annabel: Bernetta, born March, 1905; Alton, January 3, 191I.
BULEY The Buly, Buley or Bulyea fam- ily appears in the public records in Westchester and Ulster coun- ties, New York, in 1763. John Bulyea, of Phillipsburg, Westchester county, New York, made his will March 18, 1763, bequeathing to wife Elinor and sons Robert and Henry. He must have had a son John also, for Robert Bulyea died in 1766, and his brother John was appointed administrator, November 4, 1766. This John Buley (also spelled Bullyea and Bulyea) was a son-in-law of Samuel and Alice Davenport, of North Castle, Westches- ter county. Samuel Davenport's will, dated February 25, 1773, mentions him, and Alice Davenport in her will, dated March, 1775, mentions daughter Rachel, wife of John Bull- yea. John was the only one of the name in the census of 1790, except Benjamin, men- tioned below. He was living at Mount Pleas- ant, Westchester county, and had in his fam- ily two males over sixteen and two under that age and six females. A search of all the Ul- ster, Westchester and New York probate rec- of ords fails to reveal another trace the family.
(I) Benjamin Buley, doubtless related to the Bulyeas of Westchester county, men- tioned above, settled in Marbletown, Ulster county. He lived to a great age, tradition says one hundred and three years. He was a soldier in the revolution in General Marinus Willett's levies, 1781-82. His name does not appear in the lists of settlers and other rec- ords of Marbletown, though he may have been in Ulster county some years before the war. In 1790 the first federal census shows that he was the only man of the name reported in New York state under the spelling Buly or
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Buley. He had one son under sixteen and one female in his family, indicating that he was a young man. In 1803 he was on the Marbletown jury list, and in 1811 was on the tax list of that town. Children: Jacob or Jacobus, was on the tax list of 1811 at Mar- bletown ; Abraham C., mentioned below. Per- haps other children.
(II) Abraham C., son of Benjamin Buley, was born in Marbletown, Ulster county, New York, May 4, 1804, died in Sayre, Pennsyl- vania, March 20, 1888. He was educated in the public schools, and learned the trade of shoemaker. About 1828 he located at Ithaca, Tompkins county, and lived in that county until the spring of 1850, when he removed to the town of Chemung, Chemung county, where he followed his trade for many years. Eventually he removed to Waverly, New York, and for three years made his home with his son Joseph. His last years were spent in the home of his son, Cornelius L. Buley, at Sayre, Pennsylvania. He was bur- ied, however, in Waverly, New York, in the Forest Home cemetery.
He married, April 22, 1832, Hannah Mas- terson, born October 5, 1803, died in Waverly, July 3, 1894. Children : I. James D., born December 14, 1833, died March 11, 1909. 2. Joseph Myron, mentioned below. 3. Cornelius L., born 1844, died 1911. 4. Cornelia, twin of Cornelius L., died in infancy.
(III) Joseph Myron, son of Abraham C. Buley, was born July 26, 1836, in Danby, Tompkins county, New York, died February 13, 1898, at Waverly, New York. He re- ceived his early education in the public schools at Danby. He learned the trade of black- smith and followed it in Chemung, Owego and Waverly, New York. During part of his life he was a journeyman and for many years he was in business on his own account. He married, in Tioga, New York, June 5, 1867, Amanda A. Quimby, born in Monroe- ton, Pennsylvania, July 25, 1849, and is now living at Waverly, a daughter of John L. and Anna (Harris) Quimby. Her father was born in Sullivan county, New York, Febru- ary 28, 1807, son of Solomon Quimby ; her mother, Anna Harris Quimby, was born in Luzerne county, Pennsylvania, June 17, 1806. Children of Joseph M. and Amanda A. Buley : I. Louis J., mentioned below. 2. Joseph M., born February 13, 1870; married Nora McCutchins ; children: Victor, Louis, Hilton
Clifford and Juanita. 3. Harry, born Septem- ber 28, 1872, died February 20, 1875.
(IV) Louis John Buley, son of Joseph Myron Buley, was born February 9, 1869, at Waverly. He was educated there in the pub- lic schools, and afterward became a clerk in the office of the Wells-Fargo Express Com- pany in Waverly and continued in that em- ployment until 1888. He resigned to take a position in the Citizens' Bank as clerk and bookkeeper, January 8, 1888, and since 1895 he has been assistant cashier of this institu- tion. He is active in public affairs, a Demo- crat in politics, and treasurer of the village of Waverly. He is a member of the volunteer fire department, treasurer of the Tioga Hose Company and was formerly foreman. He is a member of the Presbyterian Church of Wa- verly, and of Waverly Lodge, No. 407, Free and Accepted Masons.
He married, September 1I, 1901, Edith A., daughter of Lorenzo and Mary (Wood) Rog- ers, of Nichols, New York. Children of Mr. and Mrs. Buley: John Quimby, died in in- fancy, and Theodore Louis, born January 8, 1905.
Captain William Raymond, RAYMOND immigrant ancestor, was from Essex county, Eng- land, and came to New England, "about the year 1652," according to his own testimony, given in the Essex court, December 28, 1697. His father was William Raymond, the "Stew- ard," and his uncle, Richard Raymond, was a prominent pioneer in Salem, Massachusetts. According to his testimony of 1697, he was born about 1637. He lived in Beverly, Massa- chusetts.
In 1675 he was in the Narragan- sett fight in King Philip's war, and in 1683 was appointed by the general court lieutenant- commander of the Beverly and Wenham troops ; he also commanded a company in the unfortunate Phipps expedition against Canada in 1690. In 1685-86 he was deputy to the general court. He died January 29, 1709. He married (first) Hannah Bishop, born April 12, 1646, daughter of Edward Bishop. He married (second) Ruth, daughter of Isaac Hull, of Beverly. Children of first wife: William, mentioned below : Edward, baptized July 12, 1668; George, baptized October 30, 1670 ; Hannah, baptized May 18, 1673 ; Abi- gail, baptized July 23, 1676. Children of sec-
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ond wife: Mary, born May 2, 1682; Ruth, born 1690; Ebenezer, born 1691.
(II) William (2), son of Captain William ( 1) Raymond, was born at Salem or Beverly, Massachusetts, about 1666, and was killed in January, 1701, by the fall of a tree. . He was a witness in a witchcraft case in Salem and seems not to have been one of the deluded ones. He married Mary, daughter of John Kettle, of Gloucester, Massachusetts. Chil- dren, born at Beverly: Mary, May 16, 1688, died January 20, 1689; William, February II, 1690; Daniel, November 25, 1691 ; Paul, men- tioned below.
(III) Lieutenant Paul Raymond, son of William (2) Raymond, was born at Beverly, January 22, 1695, died in 1759. He was a lieutenant in a military company. He mar- ried, February 28, 1717, Tabitha, daughter of Freeborn Balch. They were dismissed from the First Church of Salem to the church at Bedford, Massachusetts, April 4, 1736. The first five children were born at Salem and baptized in the First church there, and others were born at Bedford. Children: Elizabeth, baptized April 9, 1721 ; Mary, baptized March IO, 1723; William, mentioned below ; Edward. baptized December 17. 1728; Paul, baptized May 17, 1730: Lucy, born August 7, 1737 ; Nathan, born February 29, 1740; Tabitha, born September 19, 1743.
(IV) William (3). son of Lieutenant Paul Raymond, was born July 30, 1725, died De- cember 2, 1780. He lived at Holden and for a time at Princeton, Massachusetts. He mar- ried, October 9, 1744, at Bedford, Mercy Da- vis, born July 23, 1725, died February 4. 1810, daughter of Daniel and Mary ( Hub- bard) Davis, and a descendant of Dolor Da- vis. Children, born at Bedford: Mary, May IO. 1746; Mercy, October 2, 1747: William, September 20, 1749: Hannah, August 19, 1751. Born at Holden: Betty, May 6, 1753: Lucy, February 6, 1755 ; Amos, mentioned be- low; Tabitha, October 28. 1759; Lois, Janu- ary 2, 1762; Daniel, February 1, 1764: Asa, January 1, 1766; Lydia, May 26, 1768 : Persis, November 9. 1770; Child. 1772.
(V) Amos, son of William (3) Raymond. was born in Holden, March 23, 1757. He served in the revolution, enlisting May 30, 1775. He married Alice, daughter of Peter and Alice (Greenleaf) Joslyn, of Boston, Massachusetts. Children: Alice, born at Holden, October 8, 1780: Betty, October I.
1784: William Greenleaf, mentioned below ; Mary, November 16, 1789, at Holden.
(VI) William Greenleaf, son of Amos Raymond, was born in Worcester, Massachu- setts, October 13, 1786. In 1816 he came to Berkshire, Tioga county. New York, with ox team and wagon, and settled there.
(VH) William P., son of William Green- leaf Raymond, was born in Hinsdale, Massa- chusetts, May 23, 1814, died in Owego, New York, March 4, 1877. He came to Berk- shire, New York, with his parents when two years of age. In 1835 he went to Bingham- ton, New York, and in 1836 settled in Owego, New York, where he was a farmer and a hotel man, keeping the Tioga House, in Owego. He was a member of the assembly before the civil war. He married, February 20, 1836, Elizabeth Searles, of Newbury, New York : she was born June 13. 1815. Children : William Byron, living in Owego: Chauncey Lyman, mentioned below; Charles, lives in California, has children: Charles and Mary ; Mary, lives in Elmira, New York, married (first) Charles Goodrich (second), John Frazur, and (third) Lewis H. Merchant, M. D.
(VIII) Chauncey Lyman, son of William P. Raymond, was born in Owego, New York, December 18, 1840, died May 17, 1902. He was educated in the public schools and at Owego Academy. For some time he was in the hotel business, being proprietor of the Ahwaga House. Later he engaged in the grocery business in Owego, and kept it up to the time of his death. He was an attendant of the Presbyterian church. He married. in 1868, Mary Frances Ogden, born in Owego, August 17, 1847, daughter of Walter and Mary ( Stroup) Ogden. Child, William Wal- ter, mentioned below.
(IX) William Walter, son of Chauney Ly- man Raymond, was born in Owego, Tioga county, New York, March 9. 1870. He at- tended the public schools of his native town. In 1883 he started upon his business career as clerk in his father's store, and he continued in the grocery business until 1902. Since then he has been with the Standard Butter Com- pany, of which he has been secretary since 1910. He is also secretary of the National Casein Company of Owego; director of the Tioga National Bank; member of Owego Lodge. No. 1039, Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks, and an elder of the Presby-
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terian church of Tioga. In politics he is a Republican, and in 1912 was elected super- visor of the village of Owego.
He married, June 12, 1895, Anna Goodrich, daughter of Abram Chase and Sarah Fran- cis (Fruman ) Thompson. They have one child, Sarah Thompson, born June 3, 1896.
Jolin Anthony Beck, immigrant
BECK ancestor, came from an old and prominent family in Germany. The name is thought to have been spelled Boeck originally. He was second cousin to King George of Sweden. He was born in Iseinah, Germany, and came to America be- fore the revolution, settling in the Mohawk valley. He was a well-educated man and a fine scholar. Some of the towns in the Mo- hawk valley were named by him. For forty years he led the choir in the Lutheran church in Palatine, New York, He was a tailor by trade, doing fashionable tailoring and cutting. He died at Palatine, about 1847, aged ninety years. He married Mary Nellis. Children : William, mentioned below : John: George ; Lewis: Benjamin; Mary, married Peter Smith.
(II ) William, son of John Anthony Beck, was born in Palatine, New York, died at Evans Mills, Jefferson county, New York, aged eighty-four years. He moved to North- ern New York, at an early time, and lived there the remainder of his life. He was a farmer, blacksmith, and wood worker, and a natural mechanic. He and his four brothers served in the war of 1812. He married ( first ) Mary, daughter of John I. and Mary (Snits) Shultz, of Fort Plain, New York; John I. Shultz served in the revolution, and was with Burgoyne at the battle of Saratoga. He mar- ried (second) Phebe Goodenough. Children, by first wife: I. Phebe. 2. Anthony. 3. Aaron. 4. Mary. 5. William. 6. Amy. 7. Edward Schultz, mentioned below. S. Lucin- da, married Blodgett, of Chicago. 9. John Henry, served in the civil war; lives in Wayland, Michigan. By second wife: 10. Ephraim, served in the civil war: was post- master at Oneida, New York. II. Lewis W., a physician ; lives in Los Angeles, California. 12. Franklin H., died in Los Angeles, Cali- fornia ; was a Methodist clergyman, and su- perintendent of Soldiers' Home. 13. Chloe. 14. James, lives in San Diego, California ; served in the civil war ; is an orange grower.
15. Laura. 16. Fannie. 17. Albert, fruit grower in California : served in the civil war.
(III) Edward Schultz, son of William Beck, was born November 25, 1823, at Fort Plain, Mohawk valley, New York. He re- ceived his education in the Fort Plain schools, and Rochester University, from which he was graduated in 1842. He always has been a teacher, and even now gives private lessons in Owego, New York, where he is living. For many years he taught school in Mont- gomery county, New York, and later in Tioga county, New York. During the civil war he taught school in Candor, New York. Later he moved to Owego, where he has lived for many years. He is an unusually fine scholar, and has kept all of his faculties to a remark- able degrec. There are few who could equal his record of over fifty years in teaching school. Although he is almost ninety years of age, he is still active and alert, and is a true type of old-fashioned courtesy. Because of lack of time, he has never entered political life except to serve as town collector : at one time he was nominated as candidate for the legislature.
He married, November 7, 1847, Sabrina Embody, who was born in Canajoharie, Montgomery county, New York, November 20, 1830. She was a daughter of Abraham and Mary ( Reagles) Embody : Abraham was born in Mendon, New York, in 1790, and died in 1849, son of Henry Embodee, who was born in France and married Leah Country- man ; Henry came to America before the revo- lution ; he was in the service as quartermas- ter : the name was spelled Embodee in France. Children : 1. Ellen Jane, born June 11, 1849, died 1852. 2. George P., June 22, 1854. 3. Charles Fremont, March 21, 1856; a tobacco grower in Owego, New York : married Lucy Howe and has children : Louis M., Ethel M., Orpha S., Leslie, Theola R., Alberta E. 4. Edward S. Jr., May 22, 1862 ; a physician in Owego; married Josephine Ohlman, and they had one child, Beatrice, who died in infancy. 5. Frank, mentioned below. 6. Lewis A., De- cember 6, 1868, died 1893. 7. Ella Sabrina, June 30, 1871 ; married Mark E. Wood.
(IV) Frank, son of Edward Schultz Beck, was born in Candor, New York, April 9, 1867. He received his education in the schools of Owego, New York, and then stud- ied law in the offices of Judge Charles E. Parker and of Sears & Lynch, of Owego. In
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April, 1888, he was admitted to the bar at Utica, New York. For eleven years he worked as clerk for Judge Charles E. Parker when the latter was on the appellate bench, though he also practiced law during these years. He has always practiced in Owego. In 1894-96 he was town clerk ; has been school commissioner of Owego; in 1909 was elected district attorney, and he still holds that posi- tion. He is a member of Alıwaga Lodge, No. 587, Free and Accepted Masons, and has been master of the lodge two terms; member of New Jerusalem Chapter, Royal Arch Masons ; of Ahwaga Tribe, No. 40, Improved Order of Red Men ; member of the Fire Company. and of the State Bar Association.
He married, November 6, 1889, Anna Christina Raff, born in Owego, daughter of Joseph and Elizabeth (Weidman) Raff, both of whom came from Wurtemburg, Germany. They came in 1855 on their wedding trip, and lived for a year and a half in New York City ; they moved then to Scranton, Pennsyl- vania, where they lived for four years, finally coming to Owego, New York; Joseph Raff was a brother of Joachim Raff, the famous German composer. Children of Mr. and Mrs. Beck : Florence Elthea, Sarah Rowena, Mar- guerite Matilda, Frances Shultz.
Nathan Pembleton, the PEMBLETON first of the name in this country, was born as early as 1760 and settled at New Cornwall, now the town of Monroe, Orange county, New York. According to the first federal census, taken in 1790, he had in his family three males under sixteen, three females and himself. The name does not appear in the New York Revolutionary Rolls. Nathan was doubtless the father of John, mentioned be- low.
(II) John, presumably son of Nathan Pem- bleton, was born in England, and came with the immigrant ancestor, settling in Orange county, New York. He married Smith. Children : Smith, Polly, Julia, Charles, mentioned below ; Emery.
(III) Charles, son of John Pembleton, was born May 9, 1815, at Monroe, Orange county, New York, died October 17, 1896, at East Waverly. New York, where he came when he was about fifteen years of age. He was a farmer. He married, December 5, 1838, Amanda, born August 12, 1819. died July 10,
1902, daughter of John Ellis. Children : Emily Jane, born December 8, 1839, died April 25, 1903; William Henry, May 4, 1841, died June 15, 1843; John Ellis, mentioned be- low ; Samuel, born October 1, 1846, died Feb- ruary 9, 1892.
(IV) John Ellis, son of Charles Pembleton, was born November 2, 1842, in Waverly, Tioga county, New York, and died at Tioga Center, New York, December 25, 1896. He received his education in the public schools of Waverly and at Lowell's Commercial School at Binghamton, New York. For a number of years he was superintendent of Shepard's Paper Mills at Waverly, and later worked as teller in the First National Bank at Waverly. In 1881 he moved to Tioga Center, where he was engaged in the lumber business and in farming, being active in this work un- til his death. He was prominent in church life, being superintendent of the Sunday school in Waverly, and was on the board of trustees of the Methodist church in Tioga Center. He was a member of the Free and Accepted Masons, at Waverly. He married, 1872, Emma R., born in Tioga Center in 1845, daughter of John Gilbert and Sally (La Mont) Smith. She married (second) Will- iam E. Knight, and is now living at Tioga Center. Children: Emily Ruth, born Oc- tober 1, 1877 ; married George C. Bladworth, and they have Emily Ruth and George C. Jr. ; John Gilbert, mentioned below : Mary F., married Herbert L. Ellsworth, deceased, and has son Robert L.
(V) John Gilbert, son of John Ellis Pen- bleton, was born in Waverly, New York, July 8, 1880. He came with his parents to Tioga Center, New York, when he was a year old, and he attended the public schools there, and the Hudson River Institute at Claverack, New York, entering Syracuse University, from which he was graduated in the class of 1903 with the degree of Bachelor of Arts. He studied law in the office of Judge George F. Andrews, of Owego, New York, and was ad- mitted to the bar in January, 1906. Since 1907 he has practiced law in Owego, and in addition to his profession has large agricul- tural interests. His farm comprises several hundred acres, and is a model stock farm. Mr. Pembleton makes a specialty of breeding and raising Holstein cattle. Mr. Pembleton is a member of Smithboro Lodge, Free and Ac- cepted Masons, of Smithboro; Royal Arch
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