USA > New York > Hudson-Mohawk genealogical and family memoirs, Volume II > Part 75
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(VI) David (2), son of William and Sa- rah (Hungerford) Mattoon, was born in Vi- enna, Oneida county, New York, March 12, 1816, and died at Albany, April 22, 1890. He was reared upon his father's extensive farm, attending the schools of the locality, and com- pleted his education at the academy in Ver- non, Oneida county, New York. He engaged both in farming and teaching school in his native town until in 1843 he removed to Al- bany, where until 1847 he was employed in the lumber yard of Robert Whitlock. ,During that year the firm of Griswold, Mattoon & Co. was formed, consisting of Aaron Gris- wold, David Mattoon and a special partner. The firm opened a lumber yard at the foot of Orange street, Albany, and shortly established a large and increasing business. Three years later the special partner died and the style of the firm became Griswold & Mattoon. Mr. Griswold's health failing, Mr. Mattoon be- came sole owner of the extensive lumber bus- iness in 1857 and so continued until 1868, when the firm of Mattoon & Robinson was or- ganized. In 1871 the business was removed to No. 105 Water street, where it was con- ducted until 1883, when offices were estab- lished at No. 112 Water street, and not only the new but likewise the old yards were nec-
essary for the conduct of the growing bus- iness, the firm making a reputation known widely through the New England states and the Hudson valley. Mr. Mattoon was signal- ly successful, bringing to bear upon the meth- ods of his firm an unswerving integrity and an enlightened business intelligence. It is worthy of mention that throughout some forty years of active commercial life, in which a number of severe financial crises brought ruin to important monetary interests, his "paper" never went to protest, and not in a single in- stance had he ever asked for an extension of time or any sort of leniency. Formerly a Democrat, at the outbreak of the civil war he espoused the cause of the Republican party, and ever since was an ardent advocate of the principles actuating its founders and early leaders. His family were members of the Fourth Presbyterian Church of Albany, and Mr. Mattoon was a regular attendant upon the services. He married, at Vienna, New York, January 14, 1840, Sarah Ransom; born Oc- tober 31, 1817, died at Albany, July 27, 1877, daughter of Dr. Whitman V. and (Parker) Ransom. Her mother was a daughter of Eri Parker and Joanna Stoddard, the latter being a daughter of John Stoddard, son of Eliakim Stoddard, son of Anthony Stoddard, son of Solomon Stoddard, son of Anthony Stoddard, who emigrated from England and came to Bos- ton about 1639. Children : 1. Whitman Valen- tine Ransom, born August 27, 1842; early in the rebellion enlisted as private in Com- pany F, 44th New York Volunteer Regiment, and July 1, 1862, was killed at Malvern Hill, in a charge on the rebel battery; no tidings of his burial were ever received at his home. 2. Marion Aurelia, born at Albany, September 6, 1844; married James Charles Fitzpatrick, (q. v.). 3. Theodore Parker, born at Albany, February 2, 1848; died there, July 21, 1848. 4. Harriet Electa, born at Albany, August II, 1855; married Charles A. Phelps, of Cam- den, Oneida County, New York; children : Howard Mattoon and Charles Rankin Phelps.
James Charles Fitzpatrick, son of John Fitzpatrick, a dry goods merchant of Eighth avenue, New York City, and his wife, Jo- hanna Tracy, was born November 14, 1841, in New York City. He was educated in the public schools of that city, and in 1859 was graduated from the College of the City of New York, receiving the degree of A.B., at- taining high honors and standing at the head of his class in both Latin and Greek. The following year he received the degree of A.M. from the same institution. He was a member of the Greek letter fraternity Theta Delta Chi, and was one of the most popular.
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Mr. Fitzpatrick began his professional ca- reer as a writer of short stories, the major part of his earlier efforts being contributions which he sold to the New York Ledger. In 1861 he became one of the staff of the New York Herald, which was a line which suited his inclination since the time he received his earliest training, and in which he in time was well known as he advanced. Upon the break- ing out of the civil war he was assigned to field duty as a war correspondent, and during most of that serious conflict was attached to the Ninth Army Corps. For a time he was aide-de-camp, with the rank of captain, to General Burnside, who commanded the Ninth Corps. He reported, among other campaigns, the sieges of Vicksburg and Knoxville, the battle of Fredericksburg, both attacks on Fort Fisher, and the engagements in the Wilder- ness. In the latter campaign he was for a short time a prisoner in the hands of the Confederates. During the war he also con- tributed drawings of incidents in the field to Leslie's Weekly, which made a specialty of illustrating the entire conflict as thoroughly as possible, and these drawings by him have re- cently been reproduced in a set of two large volumes because of their great historical value to students of the civil war. He was thus, it may easily be seen, one of the most versa- tile and useful of those who recorded the incidents of the war, and practically were making history.
In 1867 he was sent to Albany to report the proceedings of the constitutional conven- tion of that year, held in the state capitol. He likewise represented The Herald in the legislatures of 1867-68. In 1870 he was made financial editor and subsequently city editor, manager of the newly founded New York Evening Telegram, and correspondent in charge of the Herald Bureau in the city of Washington. In 1881 ill health caused him to resign from the Herald staff, and although for two short periods he was financial editor of the New York Star and of the Brooklyn Citizen, the greater part of his writings in later life consisted of contributions of a mis- cellaneous nature to many periodicals and newspapers. In politics he was a Republican. He died in Brooklyn, New York, July 18, 1901.
Mr. Fitzpatrick married, at Albany, Au- gust 4, 1869, Marion Aurelia Mattoon. Chil- dren: I. Mary Ransom, born in Brooklyn, New York, May 1, 1870; graduated at Cor- nell University; in 1910, principal of public school No. 34, Brooklyn. 2. David Mattoon, born at Brooklyn, New York, July 6, 1874; by act of legislature changed name to David
Mattoon; married, at Albany, December 22, 1906, Jennie E. Beckford. 3. John Tracy, born at Washington, D. C., January 6, 1878; graduated from Cornell University ; admitted to bar of New York state, 1903; assistant leg- islative reference librarian at state capitol, Albany. 4. James Stoddard, born at Wash- ington, D. C., April 4, 1879; married, at Al- bany, June 25, 1900, Laura P. Hefferman ; children : Paul Mattoon, born April 12, 1901 ; Laura Marion, July 14, 1904; Cornelius Stod- dard, September 13, 1905. 5. Jesse Arnette, born at Brooklyn, New York, August 5, 1881 ; married, January 1, 1901, Florence Broderick ; civil engineer; child: Florence Marion, born February I, 1902. 6. Marion Aurelia, born at Brooklyn, New York, December 28, 1884; graduate of Cornell University, 1907; teacher in high school, Hornell, New York. 7. Sarah Hungerford, born at Brooklyn, New York, September 7, 1887.
The name of Morton, More- MORTON ton, and Montaigne, is earliest found in old Dauphine, and is still existent in France. In family annals there is a repeated statement that one of the family (emigrated from Dauphine, first to Brittany, then to Normandy, where he joined William the Conqueror. The family in Eng- land was noble and held exalted position in both church and state. Prominent among the English Mortons who came to America were Thomas Morton, Esq., Rev. Charles Morton, Landgrave Joseph Morton, proprietary gover- nor of South Carolina, and George Morton, ancestor of the Albany family of Warner Groom Morton. In America the family has achieved prominence in every department of life, public and private. Perhaps the best known of the name is Levi Parsons Morton, M.C., foreign diplomat, governor of New York and vice-president of the United States. (I) George Morton, the first of the name to found a family in America, was born about 1585, at Austerfield, Yorkshire, Eng- land, and is believed to have descended from the ancient family of Morton who bore arms: "Quarterly gu. and em .; in the dexter chief and sinister base each a goat's head or. Crest : A goat's head or, attired or." Of his early life nothing can be told. It is definitely known that he early joined the Pilgrims at Leyden and continued in their company until his death. When the first of the colonists de- parted for America he remained behind, al- though he "much desired" to embark then and intended soon to join them. One writer says that he was "the financial agent in Lon- don for the Plymouth Colony." The work,
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however, for which he is most noted and which forever links his name with American history, is the publication by him in London, 1622, of what is known as "Morton's Rela- tion," but entitled "Relation or Journall of the beginning and proceedings of the English Plantation settled at Plymouth in New Eng- land by certain English Adventurers both merchants and others; with their difficult pas- sage, their safe arrival, their joyful building of and comfortable planting themselves in the now well defended Towne of New Ply- mouth; as also a relation of four several discoverees since made by some of the same English Planters there resident," etc., etc. The "Relation" may be justly considered the first history of New England, and is com- posed of letters and journals from the chief colonists at Plymouth, either addressed or en- trusted to George Morton. The "Relation" is full of valuable information, and still con- tinues an authority. Two copies of the work are in the Lenox Library, New York City. Shortly after it was placed before the public, George Morton sailed for America with his wife and five children in the ship "Ann," the third and last ship to carry what are dis- tinctively known as "The Forefathers," and reached Plymouth early in June, 1623. He had been very active in promoting emigration and it may be inferred that the "Ann's" val- uable addition to the colony was in a great measure due to his efforts. He did not long survive his arrival, dying in June of the year following. His early death was a great loss to the infant colony. He is described as "a pious gracious servant of God, and very faith- ful in whatever public employment he was intrusted withal." He married, in Leyden, Holland, August 2, 1612, Julianna, daughter of Alexander Carpenter, and sister of Agnes Carpenter, second wife of Mr. Samuel Fuller, a passenger in the "Mayflower" and the first physician to settle in America. His wife Ju- lianna survived him and married (second) Manasseh Kempton, a member of the first assembly of the colony. She died February 19-29, 1665-6, aged eighty-one years, and in the Plymouth town records is called "a faith- ful servant of God." Children, all born in Leyden: 1. Nathaniel, born about 1613. To him is due the good preservation of the archives of the Plymouth Colony. He was clerk of the colony court from 1645 to his death, June 29, 1685. He wrote the "First Beginnings and After Progress of the Church of Christ at Plymouth," which has preserved the early history of the first church established in New England. But the greatest work upon which his fame securely rests is "New
England's Memorial," published at Cam- bridge, in 1669, frequently referred to as "the corner stone of New England history." It is a time-honored book, has passed through seven editions, and is an impartial history of the Pilgrim Fathers. He married Lydia Coop- er, and had eight children. 2. Patience, born 1615, died 1691 ; married, 1633, John Faunce, who came in the "Ann" 'in 1623; nine chil- dren ; a descendant is William Bradford, lieu- tenant-governor of Rhode Island, U. S. sena- tor, and president pro tem. of the senate in 1787. 3. John, born 1616; constable of Ply- mouth, 1654; deputy to general court, 1662; assessor, 1664; selectman, 1666; collector of excise, 1668. In 1670 removed to Middle- boro, Massachusetts, of which town he was one of the twenty original proprietors and its first representative to the general court, holding until his death in 1673. He married Lettice (possibly Hanford) ; nine children; to his eldest son John, born 1650, is due the establishment of the first absolutely free pub- lic school in America, which he "erected and kept" in Plymouth in 1671 "for the educa- tion of children and youth." 4. Sarah, born 1618; in 1644 became second wife of George Bonum, who died 1704, aged ninety-five years, six children. 5. Ephraim, of whom further.
(II) Ephraim, youngest child of George and Julianna (Carpenter) Morton, was born in 1623, on the ship "Ann," on the passage to New England. He was made a freeman of Plymouth, June 7, 1648; constable, same year member of grand inquest (jury). 1654; was elected deputy to the Plymouth general court in 1657 and continued therein for twen- ty-eight years. When Plymouth and Massa- chusetts merged he was chosen one of the first representatives to the general court; was head of the board of selectmen of Plymouth twenty-five years; magistrate of the colony, 1683, and at the time of his death was justice of the court of common pleas. He was ser- geant of the Plymouth military company ; in 1664 was elected lieutenant ; in 1671 was cho- sen a member of the "council of war," contin- uing on during the period of King Philip's war and rendering good service. He was chosen deacon of the Plymouth church, Au- gust 1, 1669, and served until his death, Sep- tember 7, 1693. He married (first) Mary Cooper, whom Savage says was his cousin, daughter of John and Priscilla (Carpenter) Wright Cooper, the latter widow of William Wright and sister of Julianna (Carpenter) Morton. His first wife Mary died Septem- ber, 1691. He married (second) Mary, wid- ow of William Harlow, and daughter of Rob- ert Shelly, of Scituate, Massachusetts. She
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survived him and married (third) Hugh Cole, in 1698. Children, all born in Plymouth: I. George, see forward. 2. Ephraim, born Jan- uary 27, 1648; married Hannah Finney. 3. Rebecca, March 15, 1651. 4. Josiah, 1653; married Susanna Wood, or Ward. 5. Mercy. 6. Nathaniel, married Mary, daughter of Jos- eph Faunce. 7. Eleazer, born 1659; mar- ried Rebecca Dawes Marshall, daughter of Benjamin, and granddaughter of John Mar- shall, who came in the "Hopewell," 1635. 8. Thomas, born 1667 ; married his cousin Mar- tha, daughter of Edward and Sarah (Faunce) Doty. 9. Patience, became third wife of John Nelson, of Middleboro, Massachusetts.
(III) Deacon George, eldest child of Eph- raim and Ann (Cooper) Morton, was born in Plymouth, Massachusetts, in 1645, and died August 2, 1727. He was one of the orig- inal purchasers of Dartmouth, Massachu- setts, in 1652. It is quite probable that he was twice married, as there is record, May 22, 1663, of the death in Plymouth of "Phoe- be, wife of George Morton, aged 18 years." She may have been his first wife. He married December 22, 1664, Joanna, born 1646, died June, 1728, daughter of Ephraim and Joanna (Rawlins) Kempton. At the summit of Bur- ial Hill, Plymouth, is a row of four stones of slate marking the graves of Deacon George Morton, his youngest son Thomas, his wife Joanna, and his brother Ephraim. That of Deacon George has been bound in metal to preserve it from the weather and to prevent pieces being chipped off by relic hunters. Chil- dren, all born in Plymouth: I. Hannah, No- vember 26, 1666; married Ephraim Morton. 2. Mannasseh, of whom further. 3. Ephraim, April 12, 1671; married Hannah Morton. 4. Joanna, June 24, 1673; married Thomas Holmes. 5. Ruth, December 21, 1676; mar- ried Stephen Barnley. 6. George, July 16, 1679; married Rebecca Churchhill. 7. Tim- othy, March 12, 1682; married Mary Rick- ard. 8. Rebecca, July 18, 1684; married Nich- olas Drew. 9. Elizabeth, November 20, 1686; married Haviland Torrey. 10. Thomas, July 2, 1690 ; married Abigail Pratt.
(IV) Manasseh, eldest son of Deacon George and Joanna (Kempton) Morton, was born in Plymouth, Massachusetts, February 3, 1669. He was a resident of New Bed- ford, Massachusetts. He married Mary, daughter of Captain Thomas and Mary (Thompson) Taber, of New Bedford, grand- daughter of Francis Cooke, the "Mayflower" pilgrim. Children: Elizabeth, born July 10, 1704; Zephaniah, January 6, 1707; Taber (see forward) ; Ruth, 1714; Seth, 1722.
(V) Taber, son of Manasseh and Mary
(Taber) Morton, was born in Plymouth, Mas- sachusetts, March 3, 1709. He married and had issue.
(VI) Reuben, son of Taber Morton, was born August 1, 1747, and died December 27, 1818 or 1813. He married Mary Worth, born December 4, 1747, died April 5, 1818. Chil- dren: Reuben (see forward) ; Cynthia, born 1771, died November 1, 1812, married Isaac Northrop; Sally, born September 7, 1777, married Benjamin Haxton ; Seth, born March 19, 1779, died March 10, 1827; married Char- lotte Whiting; William Burgess, born 1781, died November 6, 1813, unmarried; Eliza- beth, born May 5, 1786, died December 12, 1839; Jesse, born December 6, 1792.
(VII) Reuben (2), son of Reuben (I) and Mary (Worth) Morton, was born November 24, 1769, died June 6, 1828. He married Nan- cy Clark, born March 20, 1780, died June 17, 1843. Children: Henrietta Maria, born Au- gust, 1803; William Hayward, born February 27, 1805, married Maria, daughter of Seth and Rebecca (Rogers) Wait; Sally Ann, born July 18, 1807, died February 2, 1870; mar- ried Henry Van Loan; Charlotte, unmar- ried ; Reuben, unmarried ; Imogene, born Feb- ruary 21, 1815 ; married John B. Leffingwell ; Elizabeth, born October, 1818; married Wil- liam Colson; Seth Worth, see forward.
(VIII) Seth Worth, son of Reuben and' Nancy (Clark) Morton, was born March 12, 1821, and died August 21, 1883. He estab- lished a retail coal business in Pittsfield, Mas- sachusetts, and was the first agent of the Boston & Albany Railroad Company appointed in that town. He was water commissioner and chief of the Pittsfield Volunteer Fire De- partment. He was a member of the South Congregational Church, and politically was a Republican. He married Rebecca Groom, of Athens, Greene county, New York, born July 17, 1823, died February 20, 1898. Her grand- father, Peter Groom, was appointed ensign of Greene county militia in 1817, and was com- missioned lieutenant by Lieutenant-Governor John Taylor. Children: Emily Coffin, born September 30, 1844, died May 4, 1907; Peter Edward, born February 3, 1846, died Decem- ber 19, 1882; William Hayward, born Feb- ruary 20, 1848; resident of St. Louis, Mis- souri; Henry, born August 14. 1849, died May 3, 1874; Warner Groom, of whom fur- ther.
(IX) Warner Groom, youngest child of Seth Worth and Rebecca (Groom) Morton, was born in Pittsfield, Massachusetts, March 2, 1851. He was educated in the common and high schools of that city, and at an early age engaged in the coal business with-
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his father, remaining until 1888, when he re- moved to Albany, New York, and has since been a resident of that city. In 1884 he es- tablished a wholesale coal business in Al- bany, but did not remove his residence until four years later. This business is still ( 1910) successfully continued. He has other business interests in both Albany and Pittsfield. He is president of the New England Cold Stor- age and Warehouse Company of Pittsfield, Massachusetts, and of the P. E. Steem Paper Company of Chatham, New York. He is an attendant at All Saints' Episcopal Church, Albany, and a supporter of the Republican party. His clubs are the Fort Orange, Coun- try and Yacht of Albany; the Park of Pitts- field ; the Transportation of New York City; and the Deal Golf, of Deal, New Jersey. He married, December 17, 1871, Kate Root Greg- ory, born in Pittsfield, Massachusetts, Sep- tember 2, 1853, daughter of Joseph and Jane Charlotte (Root) Gregory. Joseph Gregory was born in , England, and married in Pittsfield, Massachusetts. Jane Charlotte Root was educated at the Albany Girls' Acad- emy. She was a granddaughter of Colonel Oliver Root, born November 24, 1741, at Westfield, Massachusetts, died at Pittsfield, Massachusetts, May 2, 1826. At the age of eighteen years he became a member of "Rog- ers' Rangers" (French and Indian war), along with the two later famous revolutionary generals Stark and Putnam. When the con- flict came between England and her American colonies he again enlisted and served with dis- tinction. He was at Ticonderoga and at Bur- goyne's surrender. He was major under Col- onel Brown at Stone Arabia, Montgomery county, New York, October, 1781, and when the latter fell mortally wounded, Major Root succeeded to the colonelcy of the regiment. The epitaph on his tombstone in the West- field Cemetery reads : "He fought the enemies of his country in two wars, and his only en- emies were the enemies of his country." He married - - Waite. Their daughter, Jane Charlotte Root, died January 19, 1895, mar- ried, October 21, 1840, Joseph Gregory, born October 9, 1816, died November 24, 1897, son of Rev. Joseph Gregory, born in Eng- land, June 27, 1787, died at the age of seventy- seven years, and Ann Coleman, born May 27, 1787, died at the age of seventy- seven years. They were married in Trom Church, England, and had children: I. Wil- liam, born December 17, 1809, died at age of fifty-five years. 2. Lucretia, born Decem- ber 24, 1810, died at age of fifty-four years. 3. Ann, born July 20, 1812, died at age of fifty-two years. 4. Matilda, born February
I, 1814, died at age of fifty years. 5. Joseph, born October 9, 1816; married Jane Char- lotte Root. 6. Alfred, born February 15, 1817. 7. George, born July 4, 1819, died January, 1908. 8. Daniel, born February 28, 1820, died 1904. 9. Elizabeth, born July 2, 1822. 10. Emma, February 12, 1824. II. Richard, March 29, 1827. Joseph Gregory and Jane Charlotte Root had issue: William C., born September 3, 1841, died March 10, 1894; Edwin Gustavus, died January 28, 1849; Kate Root, born September 2, 1853, married Warner Groom Morton; H. Francis Kimball, born February 22, 1865.
Warner Groom Morton and Kate Root Gregory have children : 1. Lucretia, born July 17, 1873 ; educated at St. Agnes' School ; mar- ried Thomas E. Bancroft, of New York City, and has a daughter, Katharine Morton, born January 7, 1907. 2. Florence, born March 21, 1875, died September 22, 1895. 3. Char- lotte, born December 5, 1878; educated at St. Agnes' School, Albany, and Bryn Mawr Col- lege, Pennsylvania. 4. Seth Worth, born June 27, 1882 ; educated at Boys' Academy, Albany, and Preparatory School at Andover, Massa- chusetts; is now (1910) engaged in business with his father ; he married, August 1, 1908, Isabella Matthews Gregory.
MATTHEWS The descent of the Mat- thews family of Glenville, Schenectady county, New
York, is from an English ancestry. The fam- ily was an old established one of Warwick- shire, prior to the year 1775, the date at which this record begins.
(I) John Matthews was born in the vil- lage of Brails, Warwickshire, England, in 1775, died in Bambury, England, in 1855. He lived most of his life in Bambury, where he married and carried on business all his life. He was a member of the Methodist church. Children : I. Rev. William, who lived and died in his native shire; he was a minister of the Methodist church. 2. Keziah, died unmarried, aged eighty years. 3. Char- lotte, died at the age of eighty years, un- married. 4. Richard, born in Bambury, came to the United States, located first in Glenville, later removed to Centreville, Michigan, where he practiced medicine until his death; he mar- ried, in Glenville, Mary Coffin, and left a son William. 5. John, see forward.
(II) John (2), youngest son of John (1) Matthews, was born in Bambury, England, died in Glenville, New York, in 1885. He was educated in the English schools. He married in England, where he remained un- til after the birth of his daughter Rosa, fol-
.
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lowing his trade of baker. He never was satisfied with his trade under conditions as they then existed in his native town, and be- ing ambitious determined to cast his fortune in with those who were emigrating to the United States. He came to the United States in 1828, sailing from Liverpool, and after a passage of six weeks arrived in New York. He finally settled in Schenectady, worked for a time at railroad construction and soon was able to purchase a farm in Glenville, to which he removed. He improved his farm and lived to become a well-to-do farmer. He was an active member of Center Methodist Church, Glenville, which he served long and well. He was one of the original members of that con- gregation, helped to erect the first church, was class leader, Sunday school superinten- dent and trustee. In 1840 he made a visit to England taking his wife, son John W. and daughter, Rosa, with him. They remained abroad a year, then returned to their home in Glenville, where both died.
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