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 75
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of the North Yarmouth lands to their son William, provided he maintain his parents dur- ing the remainder of their lives. In 1636 he was assistant under Gorges and again in 1648 under Cleaves, and he was clerk of the writs in 1667. He married Phebe, daughter of Mar- garet Green, a widow, who afterward married Samuel Cole, of Boston. He died at Dorches- ter, June 15, 1676, and Phebe died July 16, 1678. Children : I. William, born about 1640; came to Dorchester in King Philip's war ; died at Dorchester, November 7, 1724; had by wife Mary nine children. 2. John, married Elizabeth Dod, but left no sons. 3. Samuel, lived in Boston; married Sarah - and had three daughters in Boston. 4. Isaac, a carpenter ; married Ruth Tolman and Waitstill ; he died in January, 1729; children : Ruth, Mary, Samuel, William, Isaac, Jerusha, Zebiah, Robert and Joseph. 6. Jo- seph, born about 1645; sailmaker at Charles- town ; died in Boston, January, 1728; children by wife Mary: Joseph, Mary, John, William, Sarah, Sarah, Phebe, John.
In the third generation Isaac, son of Will- iam Jr., lived in Boston and died at Medford. June 7, 1739. Samuel, son of William Jr., re- moved to Maine and lived at North Yar- mouth ; Samuel, son of Isaac, was born in Dorchester, July 21, 1677, removed to Bristol, Rhode Island. Isaac, son of Isaac, was born in Dorchester, May 10, 1682, lived at Milton, and had a son William, born May 10, 1709. Robert, son of Isaac, was born at Dorchester, January 12, 1687-88, lived at Dorchester, and had a son Joseph, born May 13, 1721. Joseph, son of Joseph, was born in Charlestown, Sep- tember 5, 1673, died 1701-02, leaving no chil- dren. William, son of Joseph, left no known issue. John, son of Joseph, was born at Charlestown, May 31, 1692, left no known children. Isaac, son of Isaac and grandson of William Jr., born about 1711, was the famous Loyalist, brigadier-general in 1761 and filled important offices before the revolution, re- moved to Halifax on account of his loyalty to the Crown, and in 1776 located in Kensington, county Middlesex, England, lived in the fam- ous Royall House of Medford until he left the country, a house bought of the Usher heirs by his father and improved and embellished so much that it had a wide-spread reputation as a luxurious mansion, left no sons. Samuel, son of William Jr., had Eliah in Boston in 1725, and Elijah had a family at North Yar-
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mouth ; Jacob, born 1727, also lived at North Yarmouth and had twelve children; Samuel Winthrop, of North Yarmouth, had seven chil- dren and William, who was living in 1778. William, son of Isaac, grandson of Isaac and great-grandson of the immigrant, William, was born in Dorchester, May 10, 1709 or 1710; married, in Boston, June 15, 1738, Elizabeth Wyer, of Boston. He lived at Stoughton but we find record of no children born to him and his wife Elizabeth.
In the foregoing paragraph we have men- tioned all the descendants having male issue to perpetuate the name. In 1885 Edward D. Harris, who wrote the book entitled "The New England Royalls," said: "But it is said that the name in Maine has ceased to exist and the writer knows not of a single living indi- vidual bearing the surname who has descended from the stock that in the beginning of the last century was so vigorous and promised to be so prolific." But the publication of the first federal census, taken in 1790, shows that various branches of the family lost to the genealogists were living and have doubtless perpetuated the name. There was one family in Connecticut, Jonathan Royall, of Southing- ton, having one son under sixteen and two fe- males. Nicholas Royal, of Montgomery coun- ty, Pennsylvania, had three sons under six- teen and four females. There was a Prince Royal, of Medway, Massachusetts. In North Yarmouth, Maine, we find Winthrop Royal or Ryal, Eli Ryall, of New Gloucester, and Daniel Ryalls, of Portland. All New Eng- land and New York revealed no other adult Royalls mentioned in the census except Will- iam, of Stoughton, who was childless.
William or Wilhelminus Royall, a son of one of these reported in the census in all prob- ability, settled in New York. His son Tim- othy lived at Newton Center, now part of El- mira, New York, and married Christina Crans. a German or Dutch woman, and had children : Morris, Ruladus, Mary, Addie. Judging from the spelling of the name of the New York pioneer, he was closely associated with Dutch neighbors. Possibly his father married a Dutch wife. Annie, daughter of Morris Roy- all, married John Ryan (see Bates VIII).
This surname is found in KELLOGG England early in the six- teenth century and there are differences of opinion as to its origin. Some
think it comes from two Gaelic words mean- ing lake and cemetery, making it a place name. The earliest record of the family is in Deb- den, county Essex, England, when in Janu- ary, 1525, Nicholas Kellogg was taxed. Will- iam Kellogg was also on the tax list. There were many ways of spelling the name, among them being Kelhogge, Kellogue, Cologe, Cel- lodge, Kellock, Killhog, Collidge, Cellgo, Kel- log, and many others. There were many fam- ilies of the name in county Essex, Great Leigh and Braintrec being the seat of different branches probably of the same family.
Nicholas Kellogg was born about 1488. He married Florence, daughter of William Hall. He was buried in Debden, May 17, 1558, and she was buried there, November 8, 1571. Chil- dren : William, married Alice , and was buried in Saffron Walden, February 2, 1578; Thomas, lived in Debden, probably the ancestor of the American immigrant men- tioned below.
(I) Phillippe Kellogg, probably son of Thomas Kellogg, lived, September 15, 1583, in Bocking, county Essex, England, a parish adjoining Braintree. On this date his son Thomas was baptized there. Two years later he was found in Great Leigh, where his daughter Annis was buried in 1611. He may have had two wives. Children: Thomas, baptized September 15, 1583; Annis, buried May 25, 1611; Robert, baptized in Great Leigh, November 14, 1585; buried in Brain- tree, January 18, 1666; Mary, baptized Feb- ruary 16, 1588: Prudence, baptized March 29, 1592, buried March 24, 1629; Martin, men- tioned below ; Nathaniel, married Elizabeth, died in New England without issue ; Jane, married - Allison ; Rachel, married Sam- uel Cove.
(II) Martin, son of Phillippe Kellogg, was baptized in Great Leigh, county Essex, Eng- land, November 23, 1595, died in Braintree, in 1671. He was a weaver or cloth worker, and resided in Great Leigh and Braintree. His will was dated May 20, 1671, and proved September 20, 1671. He married in St. Mi- chael's, Bishop's Stortford, county Hertford, October 22, 1621, Prudence Bird. She died before her husband. Children: 1. John, left a son John. 2. Nathaniel, baptized March 12, 1624: married Elizabetlı ; immigrated to New England, and was a landholder in Hartford, Connecticut, in 1639: removed to Farmington, Connecticut, joined the church
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covenant there. 1652; died in 1702. 3. Lieu- tenant Joseph, baptized April 1, 1626; immi- grated to New England, first to Farmington, 1653; removed to Boston, Massachusetts, where he made a purchase of real estate, Oc- tober 9, 1659; removed to Hadley, Massacliu- setts, in 1662, where he settled permanently ; a famous Indian fighter and a man of much prominence in Hadley ; married (first) Joanna -; (second ) Abigail Terry ; died in 1707- 08. 4. Sarah, baptized February I, 1628; married William Jacobs. 5. Daniel, baptized February 6, 1630: immigrated to New Eng- land, in Norwalk, Connecticut, in 1655, was for a number of years a member of the gen- eral assembly of Connecticut ; married (first) -; (second) Bridget Bouton; died in 1688. 6. Samuel, mentioned below. 7. Mar- tin, married Elizabeth - ; buried in Brain- tree, January 29, 1685.
(III) Samuel, son of Martin Kellogg, the immigrant ancestor. was born in England, about 1635, and came to this country about 1652. It is probable that he settled first in Hartford, Connecticut, and lived there for a number of years. In the year of his marriage, 1664, Samuel Kellogg settled at Hadley, Mas- sachusetts, where he became the owner of a four-acre home lot. The town was then situ- ated on both sides of the Connecticut river, in the midst of a wilderness, and exposed to constant attacks from the Indians. In conse- quence of this danger the inhabitants of the west side of the river, in 1667, sent a petition to the governor and council of Massachu- setts, praying that they might be made into a separate society. Samuel Kellogg was one of the twenty-four signers of the petition, which was granted by the general court in the following year. The new town was called Hatfield, and he was one of its original set- tlers. :
September 19, 1677, the Indians made their famous attack on Hatfield, and carried away seventeen prisoners, who were the first white people taken as captives to Canada. During this attack Sarah Kellogg, the wife of Samuel, and her baby, Joseph, were killed, and an- other child, Samuel, was taken as captive to Canada. The house and barn of the Kellogg family were burned also at this time, but re- built on the same ground. The academy buildings at Hatfield mark the place at the present time.
He married (first), November 24. 1664.
Sarah Gunn, widow of Nathaniel Gunn, of Hartford, and daughter of Robert and Mary Day. Her father and mother came over in the ship "Elizabeth" from Ipswich, Suffolk county. England, to Boston, in 1634. He married (second) Sarah, daughter of Thomas Root, of Westfield, Massachusetts, who was at Hartford in 1639, and at Northampton in 1659, where he was one of the seven founders of a church. He died at Hatfield, January 17, 17II, and his wife in 1717. Both are buried in Hatfield. Children of first wife: Samuel, mentioned below; Nathaniel, June 4, 1671; Ebenezer, June 2, 1674; Joseph, September 9, 1676, killed by Indians, September 19, 1677 ; children of second wife: John, April 25, 1680 ; Thomas, October 21, 1681 : Sarah, April 13. 1683: Sergeant Nathaniel, removed to Colchester, Connecticut, died August 22, 1757.
(IV) Samuel (2), son of Samuel (I) Kel- logg, was born April 1I, 1669, in Hadley, or Hatfield. He was taken captive by the In- dians, September 19. 1677, and compelled to accompany them to Canada. He remained a prisoner there until May 2. 1678, when he with others was rescued by two brave patri- ots of Hatfield. Benjamin Waite and Justin Stockwell, and after a journey of great ex- posure and many hardships, was brought to Albany, May 22, 1678, and thence to Hatfield. The day of their arrival in Hatfield was one of the most joyous that the town had ever known, and in honor of the event the gov- ernor and council of Massachusetts ordered a day of fasting and prayer. Samuel Kel- logg married, in 1690, Hannah Dickinson, of Hadley, daughter of Nathaniel and Hannah Dickinson. Her grandfather, Nathaniel Dick- inson, came to Wethersfield, from England, in 1637, and was one of the founders of Hadley.
Samuel Kellogg was a farmer by occupa- tion, and in 1701 removed to Colchester, Con- necticut, and became one of the founders of that town. He was very active in church matters, and was a Congregationalist. His name is found signed to various petitions rela- tive to religion. December 25, 1707, he was chosen one of the fence viewers. He died August 24. 1708. His wife Hannah was born in 1666. died August 3, 1745. Children, born at Hatfield : Samuel, May 18. 1604: Joseph, June 18, 1696; Hannah, September II, 1699 ; Eunice, August 3, 1701.
(V) Joseph, son of Samuel (2) Kellogg, was born at Hatfield. June 18, 1696. He re-
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moved in his boyhood with his father to Col- chester. He likewise became a pioneer, and in 1728 removed to Hebron, Connecticut, one of the oldest towns in that state, settled in 1704. Here he was one of the deacons of the First Congregational Church for a number of years. He married, October 23, 1717, Abi- gail Miller, of Colchester. Children, born in Colchester : Joseph, mentioned below ; Daniel, May 6, 1720: Mercy, May 20, 1723; Moses, 1725; Elijah, January 15, 1728: born in He- bron: Ezekiel, November 24, 1732; Abigail, November 27, 1734.
(VI) Joseph (2), son of Joseph (1) Kel- logg, was born August 8, 1718, in Colches- ter. He married, November 15, 1739, Susanna Keny. They lived in Hebron, where they were members of the Congregational church. It is not known where they died. Children : Susanna, born June 12, 1741 ; Benjamin, men- tioned below: Joseph, September, 1746: in- fant, March 7. 1756, died the same day.
(VII) Benjamin, son of Joseph (2) Kel- logg, was born in Hebron, April 22, 1744. He married, in 1765, Phebe Stark, of Hebron, born January 2, 1746, daughter of Moses and Elizabeth Stark. Her ancestry was Puritan, and her father is supposed to have been closely related to General John Stark, of revo- lutionary fame. Before 1775 Benjamin Kel- logg removed to the county of Columbia, New York, to what is now the town of Austerlitz. He took with him his wife and a small stock of goods and travelled on a sled drawn by oxen. He settled in the midst of a vast for- est and was one of the pioneers of that part of New York state. He was a soldier of the revolution ; a member of an organized regi- ment of foot belonging to the portion of Al- bany county which is now comprised in the county of Columbia, Colonel Jeremiah Hoge- boom. He belonged to the company of James Spencer, and doubtless saw much service. He was with the continental army when Burgoyne surrendered, and during the battle of Sara- toga was within one of the fortifications. At one time during the war he was sent with others up the Mohawk river against the In- dians and almost starved on the trip.
His wife, Phebe (Stark) Kellogg, is said to have been a fine singer and a woman of superior virtues. Both Benjamin and his wife were members of the Baptist church at Hills- dale, afterwards Austerlitz. His will was dated November 9, 1813, and shows a consid-
erable fortune for a farmer of those days. He died November 3, 1824, and his wife, Sep- tember 9, 1823. Both were buried on the original farm. Children, born at Austerlitz : Phebe, 1770; Elizabeth, Abigail, Lydia, Elisha, August 4, 1779: Samuel, September 4, 1781 ; Benjamin, mentioned below ; Joseph, Decem- ber 10, 1788; Marvin, 1792.
(VIII) Benjamin (2), son of Benjamin (1) Kellogg, was born at Austerlitz, Febru- ary 7, 1784. When twenty-two years of age he started out with his brother Samuel for the town of Franklin, in the county of Dela- ware, New York. They went on foot and cut their way through the forest with an axe. For several years they worked at timber chopping and cut down over a thousand acres of heavy timber. In 18OS he married Sally Tarbox, of Hebron, Connecticut, born in the latter town, November 5. 1790. She was of Puritan ancestry, and a lineal descendant in the sixth generation from John and Rebekah Tarbox, who settled at Lynn, Massachusetts, in 1639. She was a woman of fine education for those days, much ability and of wonderful vigor. They settled in a log house in the section now known as North Franklin, New York, and endured all the privations and hardships in- cident to pioneer life. Later they removed to Stilson Hill, near North Franklin, and in April, 1837, sold this farm and removed again to a farm about a mile from Croton. in the town of Franklin. Here they spent the re- mainder of their lives, and by untiring indus- try and economy accumulated a sufficient sum to make their last days comfortable. Ben- jamin Kellogg was a man of sound mind, ex- cellent judgment, and of the most strict hon- esty. He was a fine tenor singer and snare drummer. Both he and his wife were devout members of the Congregational Church at Franklin, New York. He died June 7, 1864, and his wife, June 5. 1878. Children: Phebe A., born December 18, 1809: Cynthia, July 4, 1813: Emeline. 1816: John, 1818; Marvin Douglas, mentioned below ; Sally M., 1825.
(IX) Marvin Douglas, son of Benjamin (2) Kellogg, was born September 18, 1823, died January II, 1901. He married, Decem- ber 10, 1845. Hannah, daughter of John G. and Catherine Schermerhorn, of Croton, born July 22, 1824. died June 16, 1896. Jolın G. Schermerhorn, her father, was born in Scho- dack, Rensselaer county, New York, October 14, 1797, and died at Croton, January 10,
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1865, son of George and Margaret ( Kettle) Schermerhorn, of Rensselaer county, after- wards of Milford, New York. They were the descendants of Jacob Janse Schermerhorn, one of the famous Dutch patroons, born in Waterland, Holland, in 1620, settled in the New Netherlands, now Albany, in 1636. Cath- erine Schermerhorn, her mother, was born March 27, 1797, daughter of Peter Paddock, of Long Island, New York, died March 27, 1866. Her father was a soldier of the revo- lution. Marvin Douglas Kellogg lived at Cro- ton, and was a farmer by occupation. Chil- dren: Willard Benjamin, born September 13, 1846, died February 2, 1853; Francis Ann (twin), May 27, 1849, died February 12, 1853; Albert Francis (twin) ; Lillian May, November 5, 1855: Abraham Lincoln, men- tioned below.
(X) Abraham Lincoln, son of Marvin Douglas Kellogg, was born in Croton, now Treadwell, Delaware county, New York, May 1, 1860. He spent his boyhood in the usual occupations of a farmer's son and attended the district school. He expressed a desire at an early age to become a lawyer and he was not discouraged by the difficulties in his way. He taught school and worked his way through a three-year course at the Delaware Literary Institute at Franklin. New York, when that institution was one of considerable promi- nence. In August, 1881, he came to Oneonta and began the study of law in the office of L. L. Bundy, who was at that time one of the ablest lawyers in this section of the state. He continued to teach school while a law student. He was admitted to the bar in November, 1885. and entered at once upon general prac- tice at Oneonta. His earnestness, thorough- ness and fidelity to the interests of his clients brought him rapidly to the front, and for many years he has ranked among the most successful attorneys of the county. In saying that Mr. Kellogg is successful, it is meant that he has been retained in some of the most important cases coming up in this section of the state; has enjoyed a large practice and has the reputation of bringing his cases to successful conclusions. The well-known Cor- nell case and its successful termination in the United States circuit court will be recalled by many citizens. The force, energy and care- ful preparation which he puts into every case which he has taken in hand has counted against the able and powerful attorneys of
several railroad corporations. He has won a state reputation for success in negligence cases, several of which have been carried to the highest courts of the state, and in each instance, after every appeal known to the law, Mr. Kellogg was completely successful. His record in state cases is brilliant. He was re- tained as attorney to fight violations of the pure food law by attorneys general, John C. Davies, Julius M. Mayer and Edward R. O'Malley, and owing to his success was con- tinned by the Democratic attorneys general, William Schuyler Jackson and Thomas Car- mody. It is a matter of record that during a period of three years he was designated in fifty-two actions, tried twenty-seven cases for the state before juries and succeeded in win- ning every one. Three of the cases were tried in the city of New York, several in Delaware, Chenango and other counties than Otsego. The case of the People of the State of New York vs. Koster is noteworthy. He was des- ignated by the state to try the action and ob- tain rulings upon constitutional and other questions never settled in the state courts and of vital importance to the enforcement of the Pure Food Laws. He not only obtained a verdict of $1,850 upon the trial, but secured an affirmance of the judgment in the appel- late division of the supreme court, first depart- ment, with every question litigated decided in favor of the state. Mr. Kellogg has been honored with various offices of trust and re- sponsibility and has always served with in- tegrity and efficiency. In 1883 he was elected clerk of the incorporated village of Oneonta. In 1884 he was made clerk of the board of supervisors of Otsego county by acclamation. In the two years following he served as clerk of the committee on railroads in the New York state senate. In 1894 he was elected a dele- gate to the state constitutional convention from the twenty-third senatorial district. In the work of revising the state constitution, he did excellent service on the important com- mittee on state finances and taxation and state charities. He took a prominent part in the debates of the convention, especially in the successful movement to eliminate the provi- sion making $5,000 the maximum amount re- coverable for damages in case of loss of life by accident. The proof that this maximum was unwise and unjust has been demonstrated by the verdicts of a multitude of cases since then, not only in those where the injured per-
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son died, but in others where the damages for injury have been assessed at many times the old limit, where death, presumably the great- est injury, resulted.
Mr. Kellogg was elected supervisor of the town of Oneonta in 1907 by 505 majority, and during his term in the board fought vig- orously for good roads and other public im- provements, and had the confidence and es- teem of his associates. His public spirit has often been shown, and is a matter of common knowledge in Oneonta and in Otsego county.
He was elected county judge in 1908, and has held that office since demonstrating excep- tional ability as a jurist and magistrate, learned in the law, fair, just and impartial. His name is mentioned in connection with the nomination for justice of the supreme court for the the sixth judicial district. He is a Republican.
He served nine years in the state militia in the Third Separate Company of Oneonta, and was honorably discharged with the rank of sergeant in 1890. During the Spanish war he enlisted again with the expectation of see- ing service in the field and continued in the militia until his company, the One Hundred and Third Separate Company, was mustered out. He was a member of the Oneonta fire department for a period of more than twenty years. He was one of the organizers and founders of the Otsego County Firemen's . As- sociation, and has been its president. He was for seven years foreman of the Wilber Hooks, having brought that company to a high stand- ard of efficiency. He was president of the company at the time Oneonta became a city. at which time the old fire department was mustered out of service. At the time the or- ganization of the Oneonta Bar Association. in 1909, he was elected its first president, and continued in such capacity for a period of two years. At the present time he is presilent of the City Club of Oneonta, which has a resi- dent and non-resident membership of about two hundred and fifty. He is also president of the Civic League of Oneonta, and of the Oneonta Branch of the State Charities Aid Association. He is a member of the Oneonta Club, Oneonta Lodge, No. 466, Free and Ac- cepted Masons, Oneonta Chapter, Royal Arch Masons, the Eagles, and is a regular attendant and supporter of the First Baptist Church. For many years Judge Kellogg has been in demand as a public speaker. Ilis natural abil-
ity as an orator, his broad knowledge of af- fairs and convincing powers of speech have given him an increased popularity, influence and usefulness in the community.
He married. June 21, 1893, May Blakeslee Lewis, born January 16, 1865, daughter of Samuel L. Lewis, of Unadilla. New York (see Lewis). Mr. and Mrs. Kellogg have one child, Lincoln Lewis, born September 23, 1894.
(The Lewis Line).
Most of the Lewis families were of Welsh origin, though many of the early immigrants came from England to the colonies. The name is particularly difficult to trace, both on account of the great number of immigrants of this surname and of a marked tendency to fre- quent changes of places of residence. From the first they appear to have been exception- ally venturesome and enterprising. The name finds various spellings, and the immigrant an- cestor of the family traced below invariably wrote his name Lewes.
(1) George Lewis (Lewes ), of East Green- wich. county of Kent. England, a clothier, probably resided for a time in London and was a member of Mr. Lothrop's church there in 1632. The next year found him in Plym- outh, Massachusetts, and in 1634 he was dis- missed from the church in that town to the church at Scituate, where he became a mem- ber. September 30, 1635. Before October, 1636, he built his house in Kent street, Scitu- ate, which was so called because of the num- ber of Kentish men living there. His home lot consisting of five acres was the first south of Meeting House lane, and his house was the eighteenth in the town. He was made a freeman of the colony. January 14, 1637, and in 1639 he remove l to Barnstable. At this time he sold nine and three-quarter acres of land in Scituate, and his right in commonage, for nineteen pounds. His home lot in Barn- stable was the second west of Hyannis road, and he owned the highway still known as Lewis hill, besides many other parcels of real estate. His great lot included sixty acres. He tilled the farm of one Dimmock, who was an invalid. George Lewis was a surveyor of highway in 1648-50, juryman, 1649, con- stable 1651, and died in Barnstable, 1662-63. He married (first ), about 1626, Sarah, sister of Edward Jenkins, who was among the set- tlers of Scituate. She probably diedl before 1654. and his second wife Mary was living in
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