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 43
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He married, in January, 1788, Fanny Tem- ple, of a Connecticut family, a daughter of William Temple, whose property was confis- cated because of aid furnished by him to the colonists during the revolution. Children, all born at Springfield, New York : William, mentioned below; Dr. Sylvester, married Lucy Fitch; Isaac, married Isabelle Taylor ; David, married Sarah Sayre; Fannie, married Jeremiah Walling; Dr. Hiram, married Ha- ley Eastbrook ; Martha, married Nathan Eld- bree ; Jemima, married - Beals ; Eleanor, married Amos Canfield.
(III) Dr. William (3) Knapp, son of Will- iam (2) Knapp, was born October 28, 1788, in Otsego county, near Springfield, New York, died February 3, 1874, on his farm at Athens, Pennsylvania. He studied medicine when a young man, and practiced for many years at Factoryville, now East Waverly, New York, but late in life returned to his farm at Athens. He owned real estate at East Waverly. He married, June 14, 1812. Armenia Gates, born January 19, 1792, died November 29, 1850, daughter of Azel and Margaret ( Holbrook) Gates. She came of a family of soldiers. She was a niece of "Light-Horse Harry" Lee, a near relative of General Gates, and her father and his seven brothers all served in the continental army in the revolution. Children of Dr. William and Armenia Knapp: I. William, mentioned be- low. 2. Augusta, born February 20, 1816, died June 26, 1848; married, April 2, 1838, B. F. Snyder. 3. Emily Margaret, born April 14, 1818; married, September 22, 1843, Thomas Yates. 4. Mary Gates, born April 22, 1820, died May 4, 1858. 5. Dr. Jerome B., born August 17, 1822, died January 22, 1853 : a physician ; married, January 12, 1851,
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Maria Armstrong, and has a son Frederick Jerome. 6. Lucia, born May 7, 1825; mar- ried, March 31, 1850, Rev. A. B. Stowell, a Baptist clergyman. 7. Armenia, born March 27, 1828, died February, 1908; married, Octo- ber 20, 1856, John Cheney. 8. Azel, born September 29, 1834; married, January 14, 1860, Hattie Babcock.
(IV) William (4), son of Dr. William (3) Knapp, was born in Bainbridge, Chen- ango county, New York, November 16, 1813, died at Waverly, New York, April 8, 1895. He was educated in the public schools. He married, February 18, 1843, Mary Ann Shackleton. Children : I. Joseph Warren, mentioned below. 2. Emogene, born August 29, 1845; married, November 28, 1866, Chauncy Frisbie, of Orwell, Pennsylvania ; served in the civil war; children: Josephine, married Frank Loring Howard, and Blanche. 3. William, born January 21, 1848. 4. Jose- phine, born January 16, 1850; married Ar- thur L. Brinker, of Denver, Colorado.
(V) Joseph Warren, son of William (4) Knapp, was born in the town of Barton, Ti- oga county, New York, November 17, 1843. He was educated in the district schools, and attended Waverly Academy for about eight months.
He enlisted in the war of the rebel- lion, April 13, 1861, on the first call for troops, in Company E, Twenty-third Regi- ment. New York Volunteers. He was then about seventeen years of age, the smallest and the youngest member of the company. He served first in the drum corps, and later in the ranks. The first battle in which he par- ticipated was the Second Battle of Bull Run ; he afterwards took part in several smaller en- gagements ; the next battle of importance was that of South Mountain, then Antietam and Fredericksburg. The time of his enlistment was two years, and he was honorably dis- charged in April, 1863. He then returned to Waverly, New York, and attended the Eastman Business College of Poughkeepsie, New York, from which he graduated. He then clerked in the general store of Manning & Finch, at Factoryville, now East Waverly, where he remained for two years. In 1866 he engaged in the grocery business on his own account in Waverly, at the corner of Broad and Clark streets, and about 1881 en- gaged in the dry goods business in the same place, and from time to time has added to
the scope of his business, developing a large department store in the modern sense of the word. From a humble beginning Mr. Knapp has attained a foremost place in the business world, taking first rank among the merchants of his town and county. He has always been prominently identified with the Presbyterian church, and for twenty-five years has been an elder, and has been a member of the board of trustees for the same length of time. He is a strong Prohibitionist, and has been a can- didate for member of assembly on that ticket. He is a member of the Free and Accepted Masons, of Waverly, and of Walter C. Hull Post, Grand Army of the Republic, of Wa- verly.
He married Frances E. Durkee, born on Talmadge Hill, Barton, New York, October, 1844. Children: 1. Harry William, men- tioned below. 2. Joseph Warren, born July 8, 1879; partner in the firm of Mixer & Knapp, hardware merchants of Waverly; married. January, 1901, Ella Grace Mixer ; children : Ellen Elizabeth, Edwin Mixer and Joseph Warren 3d. 3. Robert Shackleton, born 1883, died while a student in college. 4. Ralph Waldo, born 1885; was a student in Cornell University and Colgate College, from which he was graduated ; now a construction engineer at Seattle, Washington; married, in 1911, Vera Taylor. 5. George Brinker, born 1887; living at Los Angeles, California.
(VI) Harry William, son of Joseph War- ren Knapp, was born at Waverly, New York, October 18, 1870. He attended the public schools of his native town. He began his business career as clerk in his father's store and learned the business thoroughly. In 1891 he was admitted to partnership under the name of J. W. Knapp & Son, and this has been the style of the firm to the present time. He has been in the active management of the business in recent years, and to his en- ergy, enterprise and sagacity are due much of the recent growth and prosperity of the firm. He is a director of the National Bank of Waverly. In religion he is a Presbyterian, in politics a Republican.
He married, June 21, 1894, Maria L., born in Waverly, June 12, 1871. daughter of Thomas J. and Angusta MI. ( Canfield) Phil- ips. Children, born in Waverly: 1. Thomas Philips, born July 28, 1895. 2. Frances IIelen, June 24, 1899. 3. Romaine, May 12, 1903.
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According to family tradition,
MURRAY the Murray family is de- scended from the Earl of Murray, natural son of James V., of Scot- land, and their crest was a silver star.
(I) Jonathan Murray, the immigrant an- cestor, was born near Edinburgh, Scotland, and came to America, settling in Guilford, Connecticut, about 1685. He and his brother John, according to the late W. H. H. Mur- ray, were farmers and shipbuilders. He mar- ried, July 17, 1688, Anna Bradley.
(II) Jehiel, son of Jonathan Murray, was born in Guilford, Connecticut. He moved to Kent, Litchfield county, Connecticut. He married, November 12, 1733, Mary Way. They had nine sons.
(III) Noah, son of Jehiel Murray, was born at Guilford, April 11, 1748. His de- scendants and those of his eight brothers are scattered all over the continent, but they are not closely related with the New York City family of that name, nor with the family in the South, though doubtless they are all of Scotch descent. His early life was spent in Kent, un- til the time of the revolution, when he en- listed at the first call for troops, in April, 1775, and again May 6, 1777. After the revo- lution he became a Baptist preacher, and some time later he became a Universalist preacher, about the time the creed was intro- duced into America by John Murray, with whom Noah has often been confounded, though there is no known relationship be- tween them. Records of Noah Murray are found in many of the Connecticut towns, es- pecially in Kent, Litchfield county. In 1787 he moved with his family .of seven children to the Wyoming Valley, where they lived for a very short time at Shawnee. When Lu- zerne county, Pennsylvania, was divided into three districts for convenience in administra- ting justice, Noah Murray was commissioned justice in the first or upper district, Novem- ber 23, 1788, and moved at once to Tioga Point. He was also commissioned justice of the peace in 1789. When he first moved up the river he took possession of the Uriah Stephen's cabin on Queen Esther's Flats, as many others had before him, but soon bought lot No. 14, land west of Athens still owned by his descendants, and built a large log house, made according to the pioneer fash- ion. He continued to preach the new doc- trine in various places, and is called the foun-
der of Universalism in Bradford county. The monument on his grave was erected by his followers. He must have had a strong per- sonality, for even grandchildren of his first converts say of him that, after one heard him once, one never wanted to hear another. He even converted ministers of other creeds, he was so convincing in his reasoning. He at- tended many Universalist conventions in New England, and in 1807 accepted a call to thie Lombard Street Church in Philadelphia, where he remained only a year, as he felt too aged to lead a city church. He then moved to Murraysfield, now Springfield, which was a Connecticut township, granted to him in 1795. He and his son Abner bought the Murray farm from the original proprietors, Abner receiving lot No. 15, and Noah receiv- ing lot No. 14, which he sold to Abner in 1807. It was soon found that two Pennsyl- vania claims were on the property, and the papers are still in existence showing that Ab- ner paid for the property three times. Noah Murray died at Murraysfield, now Spring- field, Pennsylvania, May 16, 1811. He mar- ried Mary Stowe,"of Middletown; she was one of the well-known Stowe family of New England, though her direct ancestry has not been found.
(IV) Abner, eldest son of Noah Murray. was one of the most active and energetic business men in the Luzerne Valley. He was a prosperous farmer, and an innkeeper. dis- tiller, merchant and lumberman as well. He was of a mechanical turn of mind, and there are still in existence many useful household implements which he made. Besides his own family he reared the son of his sister, Eliza- beth Murray, who married John McConnel ; she died soon, and her son, Murray McCon- nel, was brought up with Abner's children, and became one of the most prominent pio- neers of Illinois. Abner Murray's brother, Noah Jr., lived in Athens until 1881, where for many years he was justice of the peace ; he moved to Ohio, where many of his de- scendants live; he married Mrs. Dutill. of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Abner Murray married (first) December 25, 1797, Dorothea Harris; (second) Nancy Ely (White) of Owego. He died at Tioga Point. Children of first wife: Harris, men- tioned below ; Eliza, married Simon Spalding. and lived and died at Milltown; Mary Ann, moved to Ohio: there were other children
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also. Child by second wife: Edward A., married Marianne, daughter of Thomas Page, and inherited the homestead, where he lived and died, and the homestead is now owned by children-Millard P. Murray and Henri- etta (Murray) Vandyke. Edward A. also had children-E. Ely Murray, Charles F. and Anna P. Murray.
(V) Harris, son of Abner Murray, was born at Athens, Pennsylvania, July 10, 1800, and died August 4, 1877, at South Waverly, Bradford county, Pennsylvania. He moved to South Waverly about 1820, and was a pros- perous farmer there, owning large tracts of land. He built a fine stone house which is still standing on property owned by John H. Murray. He married (first) Eleanor (El- len) Gordon; (second) Sophia Canfield. Children, by first wife: Eliza, married Dan- iel Fairchild; John Harris, mentioned below ; Mary, died in infancy.
(VI) John Harris, son of Harris Murray, was born at South Waverly, Pennsylvania, in 1826, and died July 21, 1901. He lived on his father's farm, which he carried on in ad- dition to lumber business. He was noted for being especially upright in all dealings, and became very successful and prosperous. In politics he was a Democrat, and was burgess of the village at the time of his death. He had been candidate for county treasurer. He married Jane Morley, of Athens, Pennsyl- vania, born June 6, 1832, died April 13, 1888, daughter of Alvin and Eliza (Parmenter) Morley. Alvin Morley was son of Isaac, who was born in 1742, served in the revolution, and married Beulah Harmon; Isaac was son of Isaac and Hannah ( Miller) Morley, son of Abel and Susanna ( Kilborne) Morley, son of Thomas and Martha (Wright) Morley. Children: 1. Eliza, born May 4, 1862; was her father's housekeeper after the mother's death, and after her father's death has looked after his estate, consisting of several farms to the present time; she is a very successful business woman. 2. John H., mentioned be- low.
(VII) John Harris Murray Jr., son of John Harris Murray, was born in South Waverly, Bradford county, Pennsylvania, September 5, 1867, and was educated there in the public schools. He has always lived in the house in which he was born. Since 1890 he has been a retail coal dealer in his native town. For ten years he was in
partnership with E. S. Wheeler under the firm name of Wheeler & Murray, but since 1900 he has been in business alone under his own name, and is one of the leading mer- chants of the town. He is interested in other lines of business, a director of the Sayre Elec- tric Company, director and treasurer of the Scranton Sand Company, director, secretary and treasurer of the Sayre Sand and Plaster Company, and secretary and treasurer of the Waverly Chamber of Commerce. In politics he is a prominent Democrat. For three years he served as county commissioner. He has taken the thirty-second degree of Scottish Rite Masonry, and is well known in Masonic circles. He is a member of Rural Amity Lodge, No. 70, of Free Masons, Athens, Pennsylvania : Union Chapter, No. 161, Royal Arch Masons, of Towanda; Northern Com- mandery, No. 16, Knights Templar, of To- wanda, and Williamsport Consistory, S. P. R. S. He is also a member of Waverly Lodge of Odd Fellows, of Waverly, and of Greens Landing Grange, Patrons of Husbandry.
He married, December 28, 1897, Carolyn . B. Johnson, born at Towanda, Pennsylvania, daughter of Dr. T. Benjamin and Henrietta (Barstow ) Johnson. Children : Henrietta Barstow, born February 3, 1899; John Har- ris (3d), born March 6, 1901 ; Jane, July 5, 1908.
The Bastiaensens were
CORTRIGHT the immigrant ancestors of all the Kortright, Court- right, or Cortright families in New York and New Jersey. The two brothers came over in the ship, "Spotted Cow," and went first to Stuyvesant's Bowery, and soon afterwards to Harlem where they settled permanently. Sebastian or Bastiaen van Kortryk, because of religious troubles in Flanders, had moved to Leerdanı, where the two sons, Jan and Michael, were born. Jan settled on the Linge, near Wolfswaert Castle, in the village of Beest, where he lived until he came to Amer- ica. Michiel or Chiel Kortright lived in "the Prince's Land, near Schoonrewoerd," for some years. Finally the contagion for emi- gration came to him and his brother, Jan Bastiaensen, and with his three or four chil- dren, and Jan with his three sons, he started from Amsterdam. April 16, 1663. Cornelis Jansen, son of Jan Bastiaensen, was born at Beest in 1645, in Gelderland, and married, in
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1665. Metje, daughter of Bastiaen Elyessen, and widow of Claes Teunisz van Appeldorn. Cornelis Jansen died in 1689, and his will, dated February 25, 1689, was proved March 18, 1706. He was a trooper, and left his whole equipment to his son Johannes, as well as a good share of the estate. His children were: Johannes, Laurens, Aefie, who mar- ried, 1688, Jonas Lewis, English, and. 1698, Marcus Tiebaut, and Annetie, who married Adrian Quackenbos. These children were known by the name "Cornelissen." His wid- ow managed the estate after his death, and had many grants of land in the several divi- sions. In 1715 the estate consisted of two hundred and forty-six acres. The son Laur- ens held seventy-seven acres of this, and the remainder was owned by them all jointly.
Johannes Cornelissen Kortright was born in 1673, died in 1711. He married, 1701. Wyntie, daughter of Cornelis Dyckman, and in 1717 she married (second) Zacharias Sick- els. Johannes was made constable in 1702. His children were Metje, married John Bus- sing : Nicholas, Jannetje, married Johannes Van Wyck.
Nicholas, son of Johannes Cornelissen Kortright, was constable in 1729, and after- ward. He married (first), 1731. Elizabeth, daughter of Eide van Huyse, of Blooming- dale, and (second), 1739, Widow Elizabeth Peltrong. He received his portion of the Kortright estate at the death of his Uncle Laurens, and with various purchases, he owned a hundred and forty-four acres in 1729. He died November 19. 1751. Chil- dren: John, born, 1732; Nicholas, 1733; Frances, 1741, married John Norris, peruke- maker. Nicholas was a sail-maker and lived in New York, where he owned property ; he was vestryman in Trinity church from 1787 to 1792, and he died in 1820.
Laurens Cornelissen Kortright, son of Cor- nelis Jansen, who was son of Jan Bastiaen- sen, was the ancestor of the main branch of the family. He was born at Harlem in 1681. He married (first). 1703. Helena, daughter of Captain John Benson, and (second), about 1708, Margaret, daughter of Arent Bussing. He was constable in 1708-09. He was heir to the homestead on Harlem lane, which he left to his widow Grietie. This with other of her land she left to her sons, Aaron and Lawrence, the latter inheriting the homestead. Children of Laurens Kortright by his first
wife were Cornelius, and Elizabeth, married. 1753. Gilbert Garrison, of New York, and by second wife, Aaron, Lawrence, Eve, mar- ried Adolph Benson, Mattie, married Abra- ham Myer, and Susannah, married Aaron Meyer.
Lawrence, son of Laurens Kortright, was the last to hold the homestead, and he died unmarried, in 1761. He had formerly left the estate to Sarah Gilmore, wife of William Nutter, but in a later will revoked it, declar- ing the will had been obtained by fraud, and in the latter will he bequeathed his property to relatives. Valentine Nutter, only child of Sarah, brought an ejectment suit against the second heirs, in 1771, and at last a compro- mise was made in which the Kortrights for a consideration gave up their claims by deeds dated September 12, 1789, and February 28. 1799, and the homestead passed into the hands of Mr. Nutter.
Aaron, son of Laurens C. Kortright, mar- ried Margaret, daughter of John Delameter, and lived on the Delameter farm which he bought, March 15, 1742. In 1772 he received lands by deed from Lawrence in Wawayanda patent, in Orange county, where he removed, and where descendants still live.
Cornelius, eldest son of Laurens Cornelis- sen Kortright, was born in 1704. He mar- ried Hester, daughter of John Cannon, of New York. He carried on the baking busi- ness on Queen (Pearl) street, and after his death, April 15, 1745. his wife and son Cor- nelius continued in it. He was assistant al- derman of Montgomery Ward. 1738-40. He had two negro slaves who became implicated in the Negro Plot and were transported to San Domingo. His children were: Lawrence, born 1728; John, 1731; Cornelius, 1732; Maria, 1736, married John Wilkinson Han- son : Helena, 1739, married Abraham Brash- er : Elizabeth, 1742, married William Ricketts Van Cortlandt. Lawrence, the eldest son, be- came a wealthy merchant, and in the old French war he owned several privateers fitted out against the enemy. He was a founder of the chamber of commerce in 1768; had a large interest in Tryon county lands and after his purchase the town of Kortright was settled. He was identified with the Episcopal church, and although he remained neutral during the war, his sympathies were with his country. Through his influence principally Judge Fell was released from imprisonment in the Pro-
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vost. His only son John inherited the farm at Harlem; he died in 1794; his wife was Hannah Aspinwall. Children were: Captain John; Sarah, married, 1775, Colonel John Heyliger, of Santa Cruz; Hester, married, 1790, Nicholas Gouveneur Esq .; Elizabeth, married, 1786, Hon. James Monroe, after- wards president of the United States; Mary, married, 1793, Thomas Knox Esq. Captain John Kortright, son of Lawrence, married, May 2, 1793, Catherine, daughter of Edmund Seaman ; she married (second) Henry B. Livingston Esq. ; he died 1810 and his farm at Harlem was left to his children : John L., Edmund, Robert, Nicholas G., Eliza, married Nicholas Cruger, and Hester-Mary, married Billop B. Seaman.
When the first federal census was taken in 1790, most of the Cortrights continued to live in Harlem and New York City. In the whole state we find the following heads of families under the two spellings: Abraham, Benjamin, John (3). Henry, Lawrence (2). Michael, Nicholas, Widow Kortright, under the spell- ing Kortright, and Abraham, Daniel, John (2), Lawrence, Moses, Moss, and Sylvester, spelled Cortright. Evidently the two spell- ings were used interchangeably by the fam- ily. In Montgomery county we find John, John Jr., and another John, heads of fam- ilies in 1790. One John had two males over sixteen, two under that age, and three fe- males : the other had only himself and wife and was either very old or very young, while John Jr. had one son under sixteen and three females. Henry Kortright was of Living- ston, Columbia county. This Henry was probably the same who settled at Deerpark and had sons Daniel, born May 3, 1743, and Moses, 1745, mentioned below, both remov- ing to western New York after the revolu- tion.
(I) Moses Cortright, son of Henry Cort- right, was born in 1745. He served as a major in the revolution. In 1796 he removed from Orange county, New York, to Western New York, accompanied by his family and Hannah Parsell, who married his son Saffar- ine. They made the journey on horseback. He married (first) Maria Van Etten, and (second) Widow Cortright. He was a well- to-do farmer in Owasco, New York, where he died, and was buried in Parsell cemetery. there. His wife's wedding dress was made of calico, and the cost was one dollar per
yard, showing the expense of cloth at that time. He was evidently wealthy for the times, as he had a number of slaves which he set free. One of the slaves, Black Tom, re- mained with the family all his life, and was buried like one of the family. Children : Ephraim, married Guykendall and had Jacob, Sally, Betsey, and Mary, who mar- ried a Mormon and went to Utah, to the great sorrow of the family and was heard from only once the remainder of her life. 2. Saffarine, mentioned below. 3. Martin,
married (first) Brand; children : Moses, John and George; married (second) Sallie Bigelow; children: Horace, Ephraim, Cornelius, Jackson, Anna Maria. 4. Isaiah, married Hannah Depew; children: Moses, Anthony, Edward, Thomas, Philip, George, James, Sallie, Maria Jane, Malanee. 5. Jen- nie, married George Brinkerhoff ; children : Levi, David, Ann, Hannah, Maria. 6. Mar- garet, married Depew ; children : Abram, Margaret, Sallie. 7. Phoebe, married
Guykendall. 8. Betsey, married Cornelius Guykendall.
( II) Saffarine, son of Moses Cortright, married Hannah Posell, and in 1815 moved from Owasco to Wolcott, where he settled on lot No. 42, formerly owned by Martin Cortright. In 1816 there were only twelve houses in Jackson village, now Red Creek, and all in the village were sick with malaria. Hannah Cortright went through the woods in a path marked only with trees, to take care of the sick, until she herself was stricken with it. She was noted for her kindness and good- ness to others.
Isaac Posell, father of Hannah, married Jacomyntie , and came from London to Owasco, where he was buried. His chil- dren were: 1. John, who had Maria, named after his first wife, married Porter Philow, and by second wife, Peter, Isaac. Margaret, Catherine, Amanda. 2. Hannah, born No- vember 8. 1786, died July 23, 1856; married Saffarine Cortright. 3. Hetty, married Luke Brinkerhoff, who was buried in Red Creek cemetery, the first one to be buried there, 1819: children: James, Polly, married Peter Snyder and had no children, Katie, married Henry Mack, no children, Daughter, married Gilbert Brewster. and had Brinkerhoff and Harriet, Daughter, married Brine
and had Melissa. 4. Polly, married Peterson : child, Hannah. . 5. Katie, married
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Van Gorder, and had four children, a daughter, married David King, William, and two whose names have not been found. 6. Richard, married Margaret Brinkerhoff ; children : Isaac, Ralph, Hardenboge, George, Maria, Isabelle.
Children of Saffarine and Hannah ( Posell ) Cortright: 1. Anna, who married Alanson Frost ; children : Saffarine, Clemenia. Hannah, Posell, Edward. Martin, Lovisa, Henry, Os- car, Maria, Harriet, Delbert. 2. Maria, mar- ried Jacob Shaw. 3. Hettie, married Nelson De Vinne ; children : Cordelia, Columbus C., Lucy Ann, Newton. 4. Betsey, or Elizabeth. married David Brinkerhoff ; children : Myron, Osmond, Oswald, Isador, Orson. 5. Isaac, mentioned below. 6. Martin, married Mahala Duncan ; children : Saffarine, Albert, Burton.
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