USA > New York > Wyoming County > Warsaw > History of the town of Warsaw, New York, from its first settlement to the present time; with numerous family sketches and biographical notes > Part 20
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Joshua H. Darling was born Sept. 5, 1SOS; and was mar- ried, Feb. 23, 1832, to Lucretia Frank, daughter of John Frank, of Granville, by whom he had seven children: Mary E., William Henry, John Harrison, Julia L., James B., Emily M., Frances I.
MARY E. married Henry B. Jenks, late Cashier of Wyo- ming County National Bank. They have three children: Edward, Laura, Harrison.
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HISTORY OF WARSAW.
WILLIAM HENRY died at Amherst College, Dec. 5, 1853, aged 18 years.
J. HARRISON was for several years Cashier of the Wyoming Connty Bank, and died Jan. 24, 1864, in his 27th year.
JULIA L. married Dr. Edward W. . Jenks, and died April, 1866. Dr. Jenks is a Professor in the Detroit Medical Col- lege, Mich.
JAMES B. died in infancy.
EMILY M. married Gerard Bills, who served in the late war, and is now a practicing attorney in Indianapolis, Ind.
FRANCES I. married John W. Curtis, a graduate of Roches- ter University, and resides at Grand Haven, Mich.
Mrs. Lucretia Darling died Dec. 17, 1844. Mr. Darling married for his second wife, Laura E. Mosher, a danghter of Rev. Mr. Mosher, of Ontario Co., June 19, 1845, by whom he had seven children: Margaret A., who married James W. Chapman, and resides in Warsaw; Lanra E., Edward M., Grace, Kate, Alice, Frederick W.
Mrs. Laura E. Darling died Jan. 1, 1862. Mr. Darling married for his third wife, Clara B. Beebe, of Litchfield, Conn., Aug. 4, 1862.
ALBERT G. DAVIDSON was born in Springfield, Bucks Co., Pa., Dec. 2, 1803, and was married to Cynthia Clark. They removed from Friendship, Allegany Co., to this town, in March, 1841. Mr. D. is of Scotch parent- age, and a member of the Presbyterian church, as is also his wife. They had six children: Susan, died in infancy; Mary Jane, Emma Louisa, died at 3; James M., Emma Isa- bella, died at 3; and Franklin Clark.
MARY JANE married Win. W. Patterson, and has a dangh- ter, Jennie M.
JAMES M. served in the late war. He was Sergeant, Co. I., 14th Regiment, N. Y. Heavy Artillery; enrolled at Rochester, Dec. 16, 1863; discharged May 12, 1865, by special order, No. 210 of War Department. He was all through Grant's campaign in Virginia, from the battle of the Wilderness until after Lee's surrender. His Regiment belonged to Burnside's Corps.
DAVIDSON, JAMES J., was born in Quakertown, Hun- terdon Co., N. J., Nov. 29, 1807, and married Lucy M. Com- stock. They removed to Warsaw from Friendship, in 1841. They belong to the Presbyterian church. They had eight children: Calvin C., William M., Laura A., Rowena, Thomas C., Eliza Jane, Charles C., and James Clarence.
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FAMILY SKETCHES AND NOTES.
CALVIN C. married Mary Hurd of Cairo, Ill., and has a danghter, Alice L. He is a wholesale grocer in that city.
WILLIAM M. married Ann Ilelby, of Cairo, and has a son, William H. They reside in Cairo.
The others reside in Warsaw with their parents.
ELKANAH DAY was born in Attleborough, Mass., Feb. 3, 1761; and married Polly McWhorter, in Granville, March 17, 17SS. He removed from Granville with his family to this town in 1806, and settled near where the Brick Hotel now stands. Ile was by trade a blacksmith, and was the first in town. He subsequently bought a farm on West Hill, to which his family removed after his death. He was a worthy man and a highly respected citizen. In 1810 he was ap- pointed a justice of the peace, and an assistant justice of the county court, which offices he held for several years. He joined the Presbyterian (then Congregational ) church soon after its organization; his wife was one of the ten of which it was formed, in 1SOS. Ile had attained the rank of Colonel, though he was not in the war of 1812. He died Jan. 23, 1813, of the epidemic, elsewhere noticed. Mrs. Day died in 1819. They had twelve children:
CHLOE married Newton Hawes, who settled on the farm on which Dea. Crane now resides. Mrs. Hawes died March 26, 1824, aged 35 years. Mr. Hawes removed with his family to Ohio. His children were, Isaac, Polly, John, Horace, Elka- nah, Lydia, and Enoch. Horace studied law with the well-known Alvan Stewart, of Utica; was District Attorney of Erie Co., Pa., and under President Polk, Consul at the Sandwich Islands. He afterwards settled at San Francisco, Cal., and has acquired a very large fortune. He visited Warsaw a few years since, and procured the erection of a fine monument to his grand parents and their children-the family of Col. Day.
LYDIA married Wm. Webster, and died without children.
BETIILAHI, born Feb. 20, 1793, married David Fargo. [Sce D. Fargo.]
ARTEMAS, born Dec. 5, 1794; died Oct. 12, 1823, un- married.
DAVID removed to Olean, where he married twice, and had several children. Ile held there the offices of justice of the peace, associate judge of the county court, and postmaster. Hle died there a few years since.
HIRAM, born Jan. 7, 1799; died in 1820.
ELIPHIAL, born Sept. 28, 1801, died in 1824.
ISABEL, born Aug. S, 1803; died in 1824.
JOHN, born March 25, 1806; died in 1827.
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IIISTORY OF WARSAW.
ELKANAI Went to Olean, married, resided at and near that place for many years, and had several children. Ile now resides in Minnesota.
POLLY married John A. McElwain. [Sec John A. McEl- wain.]
JAMES R. DOOLITTLE was born in Hampton, Wash- ington Co., N. Y., Jan. 3, 1815, and removed with his father to Orangeville (now Wethersfield,) in 1819. He is a graduate of Hobart College, Geneva, and studied law with Hon. Addi- son Gardiner, of Rochester, Judge and Lieutenant-Governor. In 1841, after the formation of the county of Wyoming, and the. location of the county seat at Warsaw, Mr. Doolittle having formed a partnership with Linns W. Thayer, Esq., in the practice of Law, they settled in Warsaw. In 1845, the partnership was dissolved. In 1347, Mr. Doolittle was elected District Attorney for the term of three years. In 1850, he formed a partnership with Harlow L. Comstock, Esq., and in 1851, he removed to Racine, Wis. He was soon elected a Judge of the Supreme Court of the state; and be- fore the expiration of his term, he resigned his office, and resumed his practice at the bar. He was subsequently elected by the Legislature senator in Congress, and took his seat in March, 1857; and was reelected for a second term, which will expire in March, 1869. Mr. Doolittle, during his residence in Warsaw, united with the Baptist church in this place, and has since that time continued his connection with a church of that order.
Mr. Doolittle married Mary L. Cutting, of Warsaw. They had six children: Henry J., who died in the late war; Anson O., who married Bessie Jones, and resides in New York city; James R., Silas W., Mary M., and Sarah L.
IIARWOOD A. DUDLEY was born at Union Village, Washington Co., N. Y., April 5, 1825, and removed with his father to Perry in 1831. In 1848, he came to Warsaw, and engaged as foreman in the printing office of the Wyoming County Mirror, of which he subsequently became a joint proprietor. He afterwards sold his interest in the Mirror, and bought the Western New Yorker establishment; and a few years after became sole proprietor of the Mirror, which, in 1864 was merged in the New Yorker, then published by WVm. II. Merrill, and from that time to the present by Dudley && Merrill. He has held the several offices of Loan Commis- sioner, Clerk of the Board of Supervisors, and Secretary of the Wyoming Agricultural Society, many years. In Novem-
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FAMILY SKETCHIES AND NOTES.
ber, 1868, he was elected County Treasurer. He is a member of the Presbyterian church, and a friend and supporter of the various benevolent and Christian enterprises of the day. He was a member of the first Company raised in Warsaw to suppress the rebellion. IIe was elected Lieutenant. [See War History.] He was after his return from the army Deputy Provost Marshal for this District.
He married Sarah Jane Hogarth, of Geneva. They have had six children: Edward H., who was born June 8, 1851, and died April 8, 1860; William F., Jennie, Mary, Martha, Anna, and Elizabeth, of whom Jennie and Anna died in infancy.
NEHEMIAH FARGO was born in Bozra, Conn., Jan. 10, 1764. He was married, June, 1783, to Mary Chapman, born Dec. 25, 1764. They resided there about ten years; then, successively, at Colchester and Hebron, in Connecticut; San- disfield and Great Barrington. Mass., and at Green River and Geneseo, N. Y .; and came to Warsaw in 1804, and settled on the place where his son, Allen, resides, and where he contin- ned to reside until his death, Oct. 13, 1828. His wife died Dec. 12, 1839. He was a member of the Baptist church. They had eight children: Silas C., David, Lovina, Martha, Palmer, Alpheus, (drowned in 1804, aged 4 or 5 years,) Allen, Polly, who die l at 3. Lovina married Jonas Cutting; Maria married John H. Reddish. [See Sketch.]
SILAS C. FARGO was born in Montville, New London Co., Conn., June 15, 1784. He married in Warsaw, March 2, 1806, Catharine Whiting, born Feb. 4, 1786. This was the first couple married in this town; and the marriage was sol- emnized by Elizur Webster, Esq., the first settler and the first justice of the peace in this township, then a part of the town of Batavia. Mr. Fargo came in with his father in 1804, and continued to reside here until 1867, when he removed to Fond du Lac, Wis., where Mrs. Fargo died, Dec. 5, the same year. They were for many years connected with the Methodist church in Warsaw. They had ten children:
IRENE A. was born Dec. 5, 1806; died April 3, 1831.
WILLIAM N. married Sarah A. Rich, and removed many years ago to Fond du Lac, Wis., and has six children.
ALPIIEUS W. married Rebecca Freer, and has removed to Chatfield, Minn. He had two children.
ANGELINE II. married Smith Bebens. They live in Illinois, near the city of Beloit, Wis., and had eight children.
CAROLINE F. married John Morgan, who is dead. She lives in Mt. Morris, and has two children. 17 .
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HISTORY OF WARSAW.
LUCRETIA C. is second wife of Alonzo Choate. [See A. Choate.]
ELIZA ANN L. married Erasmus D. Carpenter. [ See
Sketch.]
ALLEN D., born Jan. 24, 1819, married Isabel Perkins, and has two daughters, Helen and Julia.
SILAS T., born May 5, 1821, married Rhoda Cochran. After her death he married Charlotte Hlinman. They have a son, Charles.
DAVID FARGO was born in Montville, Conn., Oct. 31, 1786. Ile came to Warsaw with his father in 1804, and was one of the first settlers of the town. For many years he re- sided on his farm, about one and a half miles north of the village. He was a Deacon of the Baptist church. Ile after- wards nnited with the Congregational church. The last years of his life were spent in the village, having retired from busi- ness. IIe married in Warsaw, Sept. 9, 1810, Bethiah Day, who was born Feb., 1793, and who died May 11, 1814. They had two children: David W., born Aug., 7, 1811, died Feb. 10, 1814, and Polly.
POLLY married Chauncey Kimball, in this town. They have since resided in Springville and Boston, Erie county, and now reside in Baraboo, Wis. They had eight children, of whom seven are living. Mr. Fargo married for his second wife, Phebe Mason, Oct. 9, 1864, by whom he had ten chil- dren; two died infants.
DAVID MASON, who married Sarah Ann Wilson, and now resides in Saginaw, Mich. They had eight children.
BENJAMIN FRANKLIN, who married Maria Bloomfield, in Springfield. They have three children : Helen. Charles, and May. He was for many years a merchant in Warsaw, and is now engaged in the produce and grocery business.
DARIUS C. married Harriet Perkins, and resides in Califor- nia. They had two children; one, Le Roy, is living.
MYRON L. married Mary Smith, daughter of Henry W. Smith, of Middlebury, and has a son, Henry. Ile is a farmer in that town.
FRANCIS F. married Mariett Perry, daughter of Jonathan Perry, of Middlebury. They removed to California, where Mr. Fargo was for some years editor of a newspaper, and was a member of the legislature. Hle has returned to this state. He has two children living: Eva and Gertrude.
ADALINE S. married Norman J. Perry, of Middlebury, many years the keeper of the North Hotel in this village. Ile died in 1867. Their children were Ada Blanch, who died at 6 years, and Sebert Courtney.
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FAMILY SKETCHES AND NOTES.
HARRISON and HARRIET, twins. Harrison married, first, Maria Briggs ; second, Laura Whalon. He has one child. Harriet married Charles L. Seaver. [See Sketch.]
David Fargo died May 16, 1855. Mrs. Fargo, his wife, died Jan. 21, 1850.
PALMER FARGO was born in Sandisfield, Mass., Sept. 21, 1796, and came to this town with his father in 1804. He married Caroline W. Scovel. In 1818 he settled on the farm on which he now resides, in the north part of the town. They had twelve children; two d. inf.
MARY A. married Burton French and lives in Bennington. Their children are, 1. Palmer O., who married Nancy Melvin, and now resides in Chicago. 2. Ira, who married Huldah Clapp, of Bennington, and has a son. 3. Sylvia, who mar- ried Mr. Wade, and resides in Burton, Mich. 4. Franklin B. 5. 6. Romanzo and Romine, twins.
ADONIRAM J. married Eliza Waterman, and resides in Gainesville. They had four children: 1. 2. Orinda and Cla- rinda, twins. Orinda died at 9. Clarinda married Dorson Bently. They reside in Warsaw, and have a son. 3. Anson, died at 3. 4. Judson.
HEZEKIAH S. married Henrietta Hill. They reside in Perry.
NEHEMIAH married Jane Green, of Michigan. He died at the age of 26. She married James Adams, of Marion, and died in Michigan.
LOVINA C. married Robert Snow, now a practicing lawyer in Belfast, Allegany county. They had four children: De Lamont, who died young; Helen, Laura, and Scott F.
('LARINDA D. died at the age of 14 years.
FLORILLA O. married Albert Green. They live in Howell, Mich., and have had eight children.
WEALTHY L. married Win. J. Parsons, a lawyer at St. Clond, Minn., and have had five children; three are living.
PALMER C. occupies the homestead with his father, in the north part of the town. He married Sarah, daughter of Wm. Coburn. They had two children: Lnella, d. inf., and Ada C. ROMANZO II. died in Warsaw, at the age of 19.
Mrs. Caroline W. Fargo died Nov. 26, 1849. Mr. Fargo married for his second wife, Mrs. Lurana Barber, of Gaines- ville, who died Ang. 18, 1861. For his third wife he married Lorenda Cady, of East Otto, N. Y.
ALLEN FARGO was born in Barrington, Mass., April 4, 1802, came to Warsaw with his father, in 1804, and married Polly Marchant, Oct. 30, 1822. Their children were, 1. John M., who married Betsey Throop, and removed to Iowa. They
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IIISTORY OF WARSAW.
have one son. 2. Marvin N., who married Hannah Dewins. They have three children. 3. Lucia Amelia, who married Chester A. Cole, and has four children: Mary, John, Charles, Emma. 4. Wheeler H. who married, first, Miss Sombeer, and had a son who died at the age of 5 or 6. He married, second, Phila Wilkin, by whom he had two children: an infant and Florence. He died April 27, 1863. 5. Walter Bailey, who married Sarah Covell, and has three children: Adelbert, William, and a daughter. 6. Mary Jane, d. inf. 7. Polly, who died in her 11th year.
ELBERT E. FARMAN was born in New Haven, Oswego county, April 23, 1831, and removed to Gainesville in 1848. He graduated at Amherst College in 1855, having "worked " his way through his educational course. He came to War- saw the same year, and commenced the study of law with F. C. D. McKay, Esq., and has from that time to the present resided in this village, continuing in the practice of his pro- fession. In 1859 and 1860, he was joint proprietor and editor of the Western New Yorker. From 1865 to 1867, he was in Europe; a large proportion of the time being spent in the Universities of Icidelburg and Berlin in the study of the law and the language of the country. Ilis letters from Europe written for the New Yorker, were read with interest. After his return, he was appointed by Gov. Fenton, District Attor- ney in the place of Byron Healy elected County Judge; and was elected in November, 1868, to the same office which he now holds. On becoming a resident of this town, he trans- ferred his relation to the church in Amherst to the Congrega- tional church of Warsaw, with which himself and wife are still connected. He married Lois Parker, of Gainesville, Dec. 24, 1855, who was born in June, 1832.
JAMES C. FERRIS was born in Rensselaer county, March 4, 1794, and was married in Albany, March 5, 1818, to Alida Wynkoop. He removed thence to Wyoming in 1821, and established himself in the mercantile business. His was, it is believed, the second store kept in that place, and the first which comprised a stock adequate to the wants of the people of that village and vicinity. After a large and prosperous trade there for nearly 34 years, he removed to Warsaw, in 1855, and became proprietor of the grist-mill in the village. He was for some tinie a partner in the Drug business in War- saw; also in the Dry Goods business. In 1866, he sold his property in this village, and removed to Minneapolis, Minn .; thence to Buffalo, in 1867, and in 1868 he returned to this
E.E. Jarman
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FAMILY SKETCHES AND YOTES.
place, having purchased a residence on Buffalo street. IIe held for several years the office of Supervisor of the town of Middlebury; and in 1843, was appointed an associate Judge of the County Court. He had ten children:
JAMES W. married Emily Stoddard, and resides in Wyon- ing. IIe has seven children.
ANDREW J. died at Wyoming, at the age of 25.
CHARLES EDWARD married Matilda Jane McNulty, of Elmira, and resides in Attica. Ile has one child living, Tillie.
ROBERT D. married Justine B. Rathbone, of Le Roy, and is in the hardware business in New York. He has two children: Lucy, and Kate R.
ELIZABETH married Charles M. Tyrrell, of Wyoming. They removed to Minneapolis, Minn., where she died. They had three children; one, Frank, is living.
MARTIN V. B., unmarried, lives at Spencerport. Monroe connty.
MARY married John I. Black. They live in Minneapolis, and have had four children: Jessie Isabel, John Ferris, Thomas, died at 3, and James Charles.
ISABEL, unmarried, resides in Warsaw.
ALIDA married John R. Blodgett, and lives in Buffalo.
DEA. JOHN FISHER removed to Warsaw from Lon- donderry, N. IL., in the year 1834. He was a descendant of one of the early settlers of that town, emigrants from London- derry, Ireland, about the year 1720, and of the class of people usually distinguished as the "Scotch," or "Protestant Irish." He was born in Londonderry, Jan. 9, 1769, and married, Oct. 24, 1798, Betsey Dean, who was born June 24, 1776. Dea. Fisher settled on the farm previously owned by Samuel Mc- Whorter, in the sonth part of the village, and at present by Samuel Fisher, 2d. He died Oct. 13, 1838. Mrs. Fisher lied Nov. 20, 1858. They had nine children, all born in Lon- donderry, as follows:
LUCY C., and BETSEY, who are unmarried.
NATHANIEL DEAN, born March 15, 1804, married Almira Gage, of Londonderry. He removed to Warsaw, and was for several years engaged in the boot and shoe trade. He removed to Gault, Canada, and established a foundry for the manufac- ture of stoves and other castings. He subsequently removed to Hamilton, and for several years carried on the wholesale leather trade. In 1866, he returned with a competence, and purchased a residence on Buffalo street, where he now resides. He has two children: Armina E., and William P., a graduate
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HISTORY OF WARSAW.
of Amherst College, and now studying for the ministry in Union Theological Seminary in New York.
JOHN. [See Sketch.]
SAMUEL was born May 18, 1808, and removed to this town in 182S. He married, June 10, 1834, Armina Dryer, who died Ang. 27, 1835. He married for his second wife, March 8, 1838, Lucy S. Woodward, by whom he had three children: 1. James Ellis, resides in Hannibal, Missouri. 2. Phineas D. 3. John C. Mrs. Fisher died Sept. 17, 1853. Mr. Fisher was married March 20, 1855, to Mrs. Lucy M. Phillips, of Baton Rouge, La., whose first husband was Phineas D. Fisher. She was for many years Principal of a Young Ladies' Semi- nary in that city. Mr. Fisher has been a Justice of the Peace in this town eight years, and held other town offices. He has been for many years a member of the Presbyterian church, and is one of its ruling elders.
PHINEAS D. was born Dec. 6, 1810. He went from War- saw to Baton Rouge, where he married, Dec. 25, 1838, Lucy M. Woodruff. He died there in 1843, leaving two sons, John P. and George A., both of whom died in this town.
JAMES P., born Jan. 1, 1813, was a graduate of Union Col- lege and of Andover Theological Seminary, and was licensed as a minister by the Presbytery of Philadelphia, in 1840 or 1841. He married, May 11, 1841, Anna Van Santvoord, of Schenectady. He labored as pastor or stated supply at Johns- town, Westfield, and other places. After the termination of his pastorate in Westfield, and before the close of the war, he went to Virginia in the employ of the Christian Commission. In the second year of his service there, he was compelled by his exhaustive labors to retire from the field, and return to the North for recuperation. Stopping at Little Britain, Orange Co., N. Y., with a relative, he was prostrated by sickness, con- tracted, probably, at the South, from which he did not recover. He died Ang. 30, 1865. His son, and only child, Samuel V. S., has lately graduated at Oberlin College, O.
CALEB E. was born May 13, 1815; is a graduate of Oberlin College, and is also a minister of the gospel. He has minis- tered to Congregational churches in Arcade and West Bloom- field in this state, and in Andover and Lawrence, Mass. IIc is now in the place last mentioned. He married, Aug. 29, 1844, Mary Hosford. They have had four children: John M., Mary Elizabeth, Catharine Almira, and Alice G., who died young.
MARY A. was born May 14, 1817; married John S. Peck, of West Bloomfield, whence they removed a few years since to Oberlin, O., where they now reside. Their children are Emily, Mary Anna, John F., and Edward W.
the Fishen
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FAMILY SKETCHES AND NOTES.
Having enjoyed the advantages of religious training, and been instructed in the faith of their ancestors, the children of Deacon Fisher all became members of the Presbyterian church.
JOHN FISHER, son of Dea. John Fisher, was born March 13, 1806, and removed to Warsaw in 1827. After a few years' residence in this town and elsewhere, he engaged in the mer- cantile business at LaGrange, in this county, then Genesee, in which business he continued about two years. In 1835, he removed to Hamilton, Canada, and established himself in the Cast Iron Foundry business, which he carried on very exten- sively and successfully for many years. He was for some time Mayor of that city. In 1855, he returned to this state, with an ample fortune, and settled in the village of Batavia, where he now resides. While he is actively employed in works of usefulness and Christian benevolence, he is no less distinguished for the liberality of his pecuniary contributions. He is an exemplary member of the Presbyterian church, and one of its ruling elders. He was one of the Committee ap- pointed by the legislature to superintend the building of the State Asylum for the Blind, recently erected at Batavia. And at the last election, (1868,) he was chosen a Representative in the Forty-first Congress. He married, Sept. 18, 1833, Cath- arine W. Blanchard, a daughter of Rev. Abijah Blanchard, well known to many of the early settlers of Western New York. He had eight children: 1. John B., who died in Canada, at the age of 21; 2. William P., who married after the return of the family to this state, and soon after his mar- riage removed to Hamilton, Canada, and died there. Of the other six, five died in infancy. A son, Henry, only sur- vives.
SAMUEL FISIIER, son of Ebenezer Fisher, was born in Londonderry, N. H., Dec. 1, 1801. He married, April 15, 1834, Caroline Pillsbury, and removed to this town in Nov., 1834, and for several years carried on the manufacture of Fanning Mills. He then purchased the farm in the north- east part of the town on which he now resides. Mr. Fisher and wife belong to the Presbyterian church, of which he is also an elder. They have five children: Caroline, Samuel M., Mary W., Helen A., and Frank M.
CAROLINE married Stephen B. Barden, and has one child living. They reside in Batavia.
SAMUEL M. resides with his father on the homestead. He served in the late war. [Sce War History.]
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HISTORY OF WARSAW.
HIELEN A. married Willard Barden, and resides in Brook- lyn. They have two children, Fanny, and an infant, living.
WILLIAM FLUKER and Elizabeth Wood, his wife, were born in Ireland. They emigrated to this country in 1820, and removed to Warsaw in 1824, and settled in the south-east part of the town, where Mr. Flnker died Aug. 28, 1866. They had eight children:
JANE married Nicholas Beach, and removed to Indiana. They had ten children, of whom ten are living. He died in 1865.
SARAH married Matthew Warner, of Castile. They have a daughter, Esther, who married Mr. Beach, a merchant in that town.
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