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 36
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(IV) Alexander (2), son of General Alex- ander S. and Amanda ( Beers) Diven, was born January 22, 1841, died January 25, 1888. Early in manhood he was engaged in the old Elmira Bank, where his business education began under the eye of Lewis J. Standiff, and later became a business man of more than ordinary aptitude and sagacity. During the civil war he was a paymaster in the army, with the rank of major. After the war he engaged in business in Towanda, Pennsyl- vania, when he was elected chief officer of the borough. Returning to Elmira, he took an interest in the Water Works Company, and the two reservoirs in the western part of the city were built under his supervision. The magnitude and excellence of the work are standing monuments to his carefulness and judgment. He was a large hearted noble man, attracting those closely who came in contact with him, and was able in the Democratic city of Elmira to be elected its mayor, Republican as he was himself, and served as such during the terms of 1880-81-82. He married, July 13, 1864, Anna Z. McQuhae, born in Danville.
Pennsylvania, April 24, 1844, died in Elmira, New York, December 6, 1888, daughter of John and Azubah (Carpenter ) McQuhae. Children : John McQuhae, died unmarried ; George Maxwell, of whom further; Eleanor died unmarried.
(IV) Eugene, son of General Alexander S. and Amanda ( Beers) Diven, was born June 21, 1843, died September 2, 1888. He re- ceived his early education in Elmira and spent one year at West Point, but left the academy there to join an engineering expedition in Mexico in which influential friends were in- terested. He came home from this to enter the army of the Union and was appointed to the staff of General Henry W. Slocum, his commission being the last one that President Lincoln ever signed. He had served on the staff of his father as A. A. A. G. Dept. of Western N. Y. while General Diven was in command of the post at Elmira. After the war Eugen Diven engaged in railroad build- ing and other business enterprises, was for- tunate, and accumulated a competence early in life. He was connected with the La France Manufacturing Company, and depeatedly rep- resented his district in the board of education of the city of Elmira. He married, August 23, 1869, Julia, died March 25, 1910, daugli- ter of H. M. Partridge. Children: Amanda A., married Gordon Buchanan; Eugenia ; Vieva L.
(IV) May, daughter of General Alexander S. and Amanda ( Beers) Diven, married Ma- jor Emerson H. Liscum, deceased, of the regu- lar army.
(IV) Alice, daughter of General Alexan- der S. and Amanda (Beers) Diven, died un- married, March 31, 1875, at Fort Lyon, Colo- rado.
(IV) John M., son of General Alexander S. and Amanda ( Beers) Diven, was born April 24, 1852; resides in Troy, New York: married Susan, daughter of Dr. Hepburn, of Elmira. Children : John MI. Jr., Alice.
(IV) Eleanor, daughter of General Alex- ander S. and Amanda (Beers) Diven, un- married.
(IV) Amanda, daughter of General Alex- ander S. and Amanda ( Beers) Diven, mar- ried Henry Cogswell Silsbee. Children : I. Eleanor Diven Silsbee, born in New York City, December 8, 1881 ; married, September 14. 1904, George Warren Wyckoff ; children : George W., Henry S., Clinton R. 2. Jamies Al-
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fred Silsbee, born in Elmira, New York, Au- gust 4, 1883.
(V) George Maxwell, son of Alexander Diven, was born June 7, 1870, in Towanda, Pennsylvania. He received his education in the public schools of Elmira, New York, and on coming to manhood entered the employ of the Elmira Water Works, of which he was secretary at the time of the change of man- agement, or at time the plant changed owners, and since then had been retired from mercan- tile and manufacturing pursuits, and deals in real estate and the management of his own property. He is a Republican, and has never held any office. He is a member of the Sons of the Revolution. He married Cora, daugh- ter of Alonzo A. and Eliza ( Young) West, of Elmira. Children: I. George Maxwell Jr., born in Elmira, January 9, 1901. 2. John Mc- Quhae, born June 7, 1904, died June 5, 1905.
SAWYER The surname Sawyer was spelled more commonly Sayer in Orange county, New York. and that spelling as well as Sawyer, has sur- vived to the present day. Sometimes the name was spelled Sayre and Sayres and some writ- ers state that it is the same as Sears, but it is likely that Sawyer was the original deriva- tion from the trade name of the progenitor. The lineage here given rests upon genealogical matter in various Orange county histories.
(I) Thomas Sawyer or Sayer, came with two brothers, Joseph and James, from Wales to America and settled early in New Jersey. Thomas Sawyer, of Elizabethtown, New Jer- sey, by deed dated 1704, bought of Benjamin Parkhurst six acres of land in Orange county, near Goshen. This land was lately owned by Walter H. Sawyer, a descendant.
(II) Joseph Sawyer or Sayer, son of Thomas Sawyer or Sayer, was one of the first settlers in Orange county, New York. He had sons : James, mentioned below ; John, Dan- iel, Jonathan.
(III) James Sawyer or Sayer, son of Jo- seph Sawyer or Sayer, was born in 1731, died in 1821. He owned four hundred acres in the south part of Goshen on the main road from Chester to Florida, then in the wilder- ness. He built the central part of the house now standing. Major James Sawyer lived near Goshen in the Drowned Land district, and at the time of the revolution owned a farm there. He was a captain in Colonel William
Allison's regiment, February 6, 1776, and was subsequently appointed quartermaster with the rank of major, February 28, 1776, and again commissioned February 28. 1778. He was with his regiment in the Minisink campaign, when according to family tradition he was wounded in battle. He also took part in the engagements at Forts Clinton and Montgom- ery, October 7, 1777, and in the latter fight, his son, James Jr., was taken prisoner and never returned, dying in captivity. From De- cember, 1776, to April. 1778, the regiment was called into service twelve times and was two hundred and ninety-two days in the field.
James Sawyer married Elizabeth Bradner and had children : James Jr., Benjamin, Moses, Mathew, Sarah. Temperance. The history of Orange county mentions a Benja- min Sawyer who resided near Carpenter's Point on the Delaware and kept an inn and the ferry; removed to Goshen near Drowned Lands and bought a farm later owned by his son. This Benjamin, probably son of James, had sons John. Moses, General Calvin G., born in 1796, and Franklin. According to the census of 1790, Benjamin Sawyer was the only head of family at Goshen, having two males over sixteen, one under that age and four females in his family. In the adjacent town of New Cornwall. James Sawyer had two males over sixteen, four under that age, two females, three slaves, and one other per- son in his family. There was a Moses Saw- ver at Granville, Washington county, having four females in his family.
(IV) Moses, son of Major James Sawyer, was born in Orange county, New York. He married Eleanor Holly or Hawley. Children born near Goshen: Elizabeth, married George Jackson : James ; Mary, married - Cav- anaugh ; Sally, married James Post ; Ellen. married John Smith ; Harriet. married Thomas; Samuel; Benjamin, mentioned be- low ; John L .; Andrew ; Charlotte, married King.
(V) Benjamin, son of Moses Sawyer, was born July 8, 1800. in the Drowned Lands dis- trict near Goshen, New York, died in Waver- ly. New York, February 12. 1864. In 1834 he came to the town of Barton, Tioga county, New York, from Orange county, carting his goods over the rough roads. He located on Talmadge Hill, where he resided for a num- ber of years. He followed farming and lum- bering in partnership with his brother, John
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L. Sawyer. Subsequently he moved to Fac- toryville, now East Waverly, New York. He was an active and prominent member of the First Presbyterian Church of Waverly from the time of its organization and was for many years an elder.
He married ( first ) February 26, 1825, Eliza- beth Johnston, born December 18, 1802, in Orange county, New York, died January 16, 1858, in Waverly. He married ( second ) Mary Wilbur. Children, all by first wife : Charles H., mentioned below ; Moses E., born September 1, 1829, died August 31, 1901; William A., October 17, 1831, died October 23, 1904; Rachel Ann, April 13, 1834, died young : James M., March 17, 1837, died Feb- ruary 12, 1877; Elizabeth, September 28, 1840, married Amasa Finch, of Waverly, and had one daughter, Mary E. Finch.
(VI) Charles Halstead. son of Benjamin Sawyer, was born in Orange county, near Goshen, July 27, 1827, died in Waverly, April 16, 1892. He came to the town of Barton with his parents in early childhood and was educated in the common schools there. He followed farming near Waverly, and was in- terested in a general business activity. He was active in religious work, an elder of the Presbyterian church for thirty years. He was a leading citizen of the town. He married. October 4, 1853. Martha W. Hanna, born July 19, 1831, in Barton, died July 12, 1906, daugh- ter of George W. and Catherine ( Wentz ) Hanna, granddaughter of John and Margaret ( McCauly ) Hanna. They had one son, Fred Andrew, mentioned below.
(VII) Fred Andrew, son of Charles Hal- stead Sawyer, was born in Barton, Tioga county, New York, October 23, 1860. He attended the public schools and the Waverly high school. He started upon his business career in 1875 in the Citizens Bank, founded the year before by J. Theodore Sawyer. He was connected with the bank as early as 1875. but became bookkeeper, September 19, 1879. He was promoted assistant cashier, then cashier, and since January. 1911. he has been president of the bank, succeeding Hon. J. Theodore Sawyer after his death. He is also a director of the bank and of the Waverly Water Company, and director and treasurer of the Loomis Opera Company. He has been active in public affairs, and for six years was a member of the board of education and for two years president. He was also treasurer
of the incorporated village for several years. For the past ten years he has been one of the trustees of the Presbyterian church. He has also taken a keen interest in the Volun- teer Fire Department of the village, and has been its chief engineer. He is a member of the Tioga Hose Company, in which he has held in succession the various offices. In poli- tics he is a Republican. In addition to his other business interests he takes pleasure and profit in cultivating the farm upon which he was born.
He married, August 19, 1885, Mary Stone Moore, born September 5, 1864, in Waverly, daughter of William E. and Sarah ( Stone ) Moore (see Moore IX). They have one son, Harold Moore, born April 15, 1890, graduate of the Waverly high school, class of 1906, and of Cornell University, class of 1911, with the degree of mechanical engineer : now with the Scranton Electrical Company of Scranton, Pennsylvania.
(The Moore Line).
(1) Thomas Moore was born in England before 1600, died before 1636. He married Ann and among their children had a daughter Mary, married Joseph Grafton, of Salem, Massachusetts ; Thomas, mentioned be- low.
(Il) Thomas (2), son of Thomas ( I ) Moore, was born in 1615, died in 1691. He married (first ) Martha, daughter of Rev. Christopher Youngs, who was the founder of Southold. Long Island, and sometimes called John in its records. He married ( second ) Catherine Wescott. Children, all by first wife : Martha, married Captain John Seaman : Han- nah, married a Mr. Lyman: Elizabeth, mar- ried a Mr. Grover : Sarah, married Samuel Glover : Thomas; Nathaniel, married Sarah Vail: Benjamin ; Jonathan.
(III) Thomas (3). son of Thomas ( 2) Moore, was born October 21, 1639, died in 1711. He married Mary -, and among their children was Thomas, mentioned below.
(IV) Thomas (4), son of Thomas (3) Moore, was born in January, 1663. died Decem- ber 30, 1738. He married Jane Mott. and lived at Southold, Long Island. Children : Nathaniel, Elisa, Martha, married John Peck : David, mentioned below.
(V) David, son of Thomas (4) Moore. was born at Southold. Long Island. November 25. 1713. He married Hepzibah Wilmot. born
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April 6, 1715. They settled near Middletown, Orange county, New York. Children : David, mentioned below; Hepzibalı, born December 12, 1736, married a Mr. Case; Mary, July 7, 1739, married a Mr. Reeves, dicd August 6, 1811 ; Beulah, October 2, 1741, married a Mr. Everet, died July 30, 1807; Deborah, January 17, 1744, married a Mr. Everet; Wilmot, May 28, 1746; John, October 26, 1748; Dan- iel, August 26, 1751; Walters, November 4, 1754, died May 6, 1768.
(VI) David (2), son of David (1) Moore, was born December 9, 1734, in Orange county, New York. He was on the committee of safety during the revolution, and his descend- ants are entitled to membership in the Sons and Daughters of the American Revolution. He married and had children : I. William, born February 28, 1766; married (first) Mar- tha Smith, died December 28, 1843; married (second) Mary (Green) Chapman, daughter of Daniel Green. 2. David, born January 21, 1768, died January 28, 1812. 3. Wilmot, men- tioned below. 4. Eunice, born November 20, 1771, died June 16, 1774. 5. Mary, August 31, 1773, died May 9, 1843 ; married Israel Wick- ham, July 2, 1793. 6. Lydia, born April 7, 1775, died November 20, 1848; married John Smith, October 21, 1791. 7. Walters, born April 29, 1777, died December 23, 1853; mar- ried, December 25, 1805, Dolly McCurre. 8. Phoebe, born December 25, 1780, died Novem- ber 2, 1801.
(VII) Wilmot, son of David (2) Moore, was born December 2, 1769, died May 6, 1828. He married Azubah Knapp, born De- cember 12, 1772, died in February, 1866. Children: 1. Major Benjamin, born October I, 1792. died September 2, 1832 ; married Ann Fullerton. 2. Sally, born September 20, 1794; married Lebbius L. Vail; died September 9, 1875. 3. Tusten, mentioned below. 4. Eunice. born February 27, 1800, died about 1865 ; married Oliver H. Vail, born November 10, 1797, died February 8, 1856. 5. Harriet, born June 9, 1803, died July 5. 1857 ; married. 1823. Bedford M. Bennett, died 1835. 6. Abigail, born January 16, 1806, died 1891; married D. S. Dunning, died 1874. 7. Lewis, born December 15, 1808, died May 14, 1878; mar- ried. 1829, Ann Haight. 8. Emmet, born May 24, 1811, died 1897 ; married Harriet L. Dol- sen. March 24, 1835.
(VIII) Tusten, son of Wilmot Moore, was born January 29, 1797. at Middletown, New
York, died April 26, 1864, at Unionville, New York. He married Amelia Murray, born Sep- tember II, 1802, died September 12, 1882. Chil- dren : I. Charles B., born November 14, 1824, died March 5, 1892; married Louise E. Cour- sen, December 28, 1844. 2. Hiram M., born September 23, 182-, died March 21, 1864; married Fannie Smith, September 3, 1849. 3. Mary A., born April 6, 1826, died October 2, 1909; married Lewis L. Smith, November 28, 1842. 4. William Emmet, mentioned be- low.
(IX) William Emmet, son of Tusten Moore, was born at Franklin, Delaware county, New York, February 20, 1828, now living in Wav- erly, New York. He married Sarah (Stone) Hotchkiss, born September 14, 1829, died Jan- uary 23, 1911, daughter of Luther and Mary (Rounds) Stone. Their only child, Mary Stone, married Fred Andrew Sawyer ( see Sawyer VII).
(V) John L. Sawyer, son of
SAWYER Moses Sawyer (q. v.), was born in Orange county, New York, near Goshen, February 9, 1811, died at Waverly, May 31, 1871. With his brothers, Benjamin and Samuel, he settled among the first in what was afterward the town of Bar- ton, Tioga county, New York. These pio- neers chose the hill lands for their farms, be- cause of the superior timber there. After the Erie railroad was built in 1849 he located in the village of Waverly, and was closely iden- tified with its development and growth dur- ing the remainder of his life. For many years he represented the town in the board of supervisors. He married Julina Smith, born April 13, 1813, died in Waverly, March 18, 1891, daughter of Joseph Smith. Children : Henry Merriam, born October 4, 1832, died February 20. 1858; Joseph Theodore, men- tioned below.
(VI) Joseph Theodore, son of John L. Sawyer, was born on Talmadge Hill in the town of Barton, Tioga county, New York, Oc- tober 8, 1834, died in Waverly, December 16, 1910. He attended the public schools and was a student for two years at the Farmers' Hall Academy at Goshen. As a boy and young man he worked on his father's farm and engaged in lumbering. In partnership with his father he bought timber lands in Can- ada, and owned and operated a large plan- ing mill and sash and door factory at the cor-
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ner of Pennsylvania avenue and Erie street in Waverly. He was financially interested also in the development of the oil lands in the Bradford district of Pennsylvania. In part- nership with his father and Ten Eyk DePuy, he was the founder of the banking house of J. T. Sawyer & Company. The business was established in the store at the corner of Broad and Fulton streets, afterwards occupied by H. M. Ferguson & Company. The business was sold about 1871 on account of the ill health of Mr. Sawyer. In 1874, after returil- ing from a trip abroad, he organized the Citi- zens' Bank, of which he became president, and continued in office to the time of his death. The larger part of his time was de- voted to this business, thirty-six years, and he built up one of the most substantial and prosperous state banks in this section of the country. He was well known and highly esteemed among the bankers of the state and served on the committee which organized the present New York State Bankers' Associa- tion.
Mr. Sawyer also gave his time and sup- port to various other enterprises and projects. In the seventies he was one of those who realized most keenly the need of a municipal water supply, and for a long time, in private conversation and in public meetings, he advo- cated the building of water works. The voters of the village were not persuaded, however. and in 1877, when further delay seemed un- wise, he co-operated with other citizens in forming the Waverly Water Works Company, of which he was president and treasurer to the time of his death. The work of construc- tion began in August, 1880, and from that time he gave his personal attention to the construction and operation of the system. Largely through his energy and good sense the water works were built and brought to the present state of efficiency. For a num- ber of years he was director and treasurer of the Loomis Opera House Company and treas- urer of the Cayuta Land Company. He was also a member of the Newtown Battle Chap- ter, Sons of the American Revolution of El- mira. New York, a society in which he was greatly interested, and was member of Em- pire State Society, Sons of the American Revo- lution of Waverly.
For many years Mr. Sawyer was active in public affairs in the town and county. He served as trustee of the incorporated village
for several terms and was president of the village. For a number of terms he was super- visor of the town and of large influence in the board of supervisors. He was a member of the first board of education of Waverly under the present school system. During the years 1878-79 he represented Tioga county in the assembly at Albany and served as tem- porary chairman of that body at the first session held in the new capitol. Mr. Sawyer introduced and secured the enactment of the law regulating the election of school trustees. A short time after he returned from the legis- lature, Mr. Sawyer was offered the position of superintendent of banks, but he declined this flattering offer on account of the demands of his own business. In politics he was a Republican.
In charitable matters Mr. Sawyer was al- ways generous, though often his benefactions were unknown even to the recipients. He con- tributed liberally to the Baptist church of Waverly.
He traveled extensively in his own country and abroad, visiting Alaska, the West Indies, South America, Mexico, Egypt and the principal European countries. He was a shrewd observer and upon his return gave numerous talks on his travels. He was a prime mover in erecting the Sullivan monu- ment at Lowman. At the time of his death the Free Press said of him: "In the death of Hon. J. T. Sawyer, Waverly loses one who has for nearly half a century been one of her most prominent business men, one who has ever been interested in the progress and de- velopment of the village and one whose hon- esty and integrity has never been questioned. * It is hard to estimate the value for good of such a man in the community. His great loss will be felt, not only by his family and intimate associates, but by the entire com- munity, for he was a man of high ideals and of the strictest integrity. Waverly has lost one of her best citizens and one of her most respected business men."
He married, at Goshen, Connecticut. Octo- ber 24, 1872, Alice Lyman, born at Goshen, Connecticut, May 15, 1845, daughter of Moses and Mary Ann (Holley) Lyman (see Ly- man). They had one daughter, Ellen Lyman, born at Waverly, May 12. 1874: married John Floyd Halstead, of Goshen, New York, Jan- uary 17, 1912, a prominent young attorney of Goshen.
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(The Lyman Line).
(I) Alfred the Great, King of England, married Ethelbirth, daughter of Earl Ethel- ran.
(II) Edward the Elder was King of Eng- land.
(III) Edgina, daughter of Edward, married Henry de Vermandois.
(IV) Hubart was Count de Permandois.
(V) Adela, daughter of Hubart, married Hugh Magnus, fifth Count de Vermandois, and son of Henry I., King of France.
(VI) Isabel, daughter of Hugh, married Robert, Earl of Millent and Leicester.
(VII) Robert was second Earl of Leices- ter.
(VIII) Robert, his son, was third Earl of Leicester.
(IX) Margaret, daughter of Robert, mar- ried Saier de Quincy.
(X) Roger was Earl of Winchester.
(XI) Elizabeth, daughter of Roger, mar- ried Alexander Comyn.
(XII) Agnes, daughter of Alexander, mar- ried Gilbert de Umfraville.
(XIII) Gilbert de Umfraville was an infant at the death of his father and was made a ward of Simon de Mountford, Earl of Leices- ter. He was the Earl of Angus, and died in 1307. He married Matilda, Countess of An- gus, a lineal descendant of Malcolm III., King of Scotland. Three of Malcolm's sons suc- ceeded to the throne.
(XIV ) Robert de Umfraville, second son of Gilbert, had livery of his lands. He was one of the governors of Scotland and was a member of Parliament under Edward II., un- til the eighteenth year of his reign, when he died. He was the second Earl of Angus.
(XV) Sir Thomas de Umfraville, son of Robert, was heir to his half-brother Gilbert, and lived at Harbottle. He married Joan, daughter of Lord Rodam.
(XVI) Sir Thomas de Umfraville was sec- ond son and heir to his brother Sir Robert. and was living at the time of Henry IV. at Kyne. Children: Gilbert, a famous soldier in the French wars at the time of Henry IV. and V., slain with Thomas, Duke of Clarence. and others; Joanna, mentioned below.
(XVII) Joanna, daughter of Sir Thomas, married Sir William Lambert, son of Alan Lambert.
(XVIII) Robert Lambert, of Owlton, was his son.
(XIX) Henry Lambert, Esq., of Ongar, county Essex, was living in the twenty-hfth year of the reign of Henry VI.
(XX) Elizabeth, daughter of Henry, mar- ried Thomas Lyman, of Navistoke.
(XXI) Henry Lyman, of Navistoke, was his son.
(XXII) John, son of Henry Lyman, lived at High Ongar.
(XXIII) Henry, son of John Lyman, lived at High Ongar. He married Elizabeth and had nine children.
(XXIV ) Richard, son of Henry Lyman, was born at High Ongar, county Essex, England, and baptized October 30, 1580. In 1629 he sold to John Gower lands and orchards and a garden in Norton Mandeville, in the parish of Ongar, and in August, 1631, embarked with his wife and five children on the ship "Lyon," for New England. They landed at Boston and Richard Lyman settled first at Charlestown, and with his wife united with the church of which Eliot, the Indian Apostle, was pastor. He was admitted a freeman, June 11, 1635, and in October of the same year, joining a party of about a hundred per- sons, went to Connecticut and became one of the first settlers of Hartford, where he was one of the original proprietors in 1636. re- ceiving thirty parts of the purchase from the Indians. His house was on the south side of what is now Buckingham street, the fifth lot from Main street, west of the South Church. His will was dated April 22, 1640, and proved January 27, 1642, together with that of his wife, who died soon after he died. He died in 1640. His name is inscribed on a stone column in the rear of the Centre Church of Hartford, erected in memory of the first settlers of the city.
He married Sarah, daughter of Roger Os- borne, of Halstead, county Kent, England. Children : William, buried at High Ongar, Au- gust 28, 1615: Phillis, baptized September 12. 16II : Richard, baptized July 18, 1613, died young : William, baptized September 8, 1616: Richard. baptized February 24, 1617; Sarah, baptized February 6, 1620; Anne, baptized April 12, 1621, died young: John, mentioned below : Robert, born September, 1629.
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