USA > New York > Hudson-Mohawk genealogical and family memoirs, Volume II > Part 76
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John Matthews married Elizabeth Watts, who was born in England. She was eleven years her husband's senior; she died at the age of eighty-three years. Children : I. Rosa, born in England in 1823, died in Glenville, New York, June, 1876; married Charles San- ders. Children: Keziah Elizabeth and Charles John. 2. 3. 4., died in infancy. 5. John Wes- ley, see forward. 6. William, born during his parents visit to England in 1840; became the owner of the homestead farm, his present residence (1910) ; at the beginning of the civil war he enlisted in the Ninety-first New York Volunteer Infantry, served through the entire war, was wounded but not incapacitated from further service; he saw much hard ser- vice with the Army of the Potomac, was in the battle of Gettysburg during the entire three days' fighting and was honorably dis- charged at the close of the war with a record of which any soldier might well be proud ; he married (first) Letitia Avery, who died with- out issue ; married (second) Lucy Shaw, and has a son Louis, who married Margaret Van Etten, of Glenville. 7. Richard, born in Glen- ville, died at Fort Edward, New York, where he was preparing for the ministry at Fort Edward Collegiate Institute ; he was a young man of great promise and had made an en- viable record at the Institute for proficiency.
(III) John Wesley, fifth child of John (2) and Elizabeth (Watts) Matthews, was born in the town of Glenville, Schenectady county, New York, October 14, 1835. He was educa- ted in the public schools and at the age of seventeen began learning the blacksmith's trade. He was connected with the smithing
department of the Barhydt & Greenalgh Com- pany at Schenectady for eighteen years. He then purchased a farm of one hundred and eight acres in Glenville, on which he has since resided. He has brought his farm to a high state of cultivation and by his care- ful methodical methods obtains the best re- sults from his labor. He is one of the lead- ing men of his town. He is a Prohibitionist in political faith and supports his principles with his vote. He is an active member of the Center Methodist Episcopal Church, which he serves as steward and trustee. He is warm- hearted and liberal in his support of the church. He married (first) in Schenectady, Charlotte Spencer, who died eighteen months later, without issue. He married (second) Sophia Ford, who died in 1878. He married (third) Mary Peek, born in Glenville, Feb- ruary 10, 1838, daughter of James and Phoebe A. (Britten) Peek, both natives of Mont- gomery county, and descendants of old Mo- hawk Valley families. James and Phoebe A. Peek were members of the Methodist Episcopal church. He died in 1864 at the age of seventy-five years. His wife survived him to a very old age. Mary (Peek) Mat- thews is a grandfather of Harmanus and Olive Francis Peek, of the Mohawk Valley. Children of John Wesley Matthews, all by his second wife, were: 1. Charlotte, married (first) Edward Erp, left a son Stanley, and two daughters, Nina and Florence; she mar- ried (second) Joseph White, of Glenville, no issue. 2. James Wise, died in childhood. 3. Elizabeth, married William King; child: Harold. 4. Richard Lewis, a carpenter of Scotia ; married (first) Bessie Erp; (second) Minnie Love; four children: Minnie, Ethel, Mary and Lula. 5. Nora, married Jacob Wel- ler, of Scotia, connected with the General Electric Works; four children: Iva, Leland, Schuyler and Dayton. 6. Rosella, adopted daughter of Charles and Ella (Swan) San- ders; she married Richard Cornell, a farmer of Glenville. 7. Stillman, employed at the power station at the General Electric Works at Schenectady, New York ; married Drusilla Percy ; two children : John W. and Helen. 8. Charles, farmer of Glenville; married Catlı- erine Van Patten ; six children: Leroy, Ricli- ard, Myrtle, Nora, Gertrude and Ella May. 9. Dennis, employed in the Glenville Electric Works: married Alice Van Patten; five chil- dren: Earl, Everett, Carl, Burton and Hazel.
The founder of the Horsfall
HORSFALL family in Schenectady. New York, was Joseplı Horsfall,
born in Yorkshire, England, of an old Eng-
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lish family. He was born in 1781, died in Schenectady, New York, in 1849. He learned the carpenter's trade and quickly became known as an expert workman, having a nat- ural aptitude for tools and inherited mechani- cal ingenuity. In 1800 he came to the United States and settled in Schenectady, New York, where for several years he followed his trade as journeyman. The first work he did in Sche- nectady was on the steeple of the old West College, later known as the "Union School" of Schenectady. He took a course in archi- tecture, planning many of the buildings he subsequently erected. After a few years of experience in Schenectady as a journeyman, he began contracting the erection of buildings on his own account. As a contractor and builder he was very successful, his skill in architecture being a material factor in his suc- cess. After a long and successful business career he died at the age of sixty-eight. He was a man of great natural ability, quiet and unassuming, very charitable and of the high- est integrity. He was a Whig in politics. He was reared in the faith of the Established Church of England, but after his marriage connected himself with the First Dutch Re- formed Church of Schenectady that he might worship with his wife in the church of her choice. He married, in Schenectady, January, 1803, Eleanor Groate, born at the Groate homestead at Kinderhook, Columbia county, New York, in 1781, died in Schenectady, 1861. (See Groate forward.) They had ten chil- dren, all of whom lived until after the death of their mother. I. Elizabeth, born Decem- ber, 1803; married (first) Barent Felthausen ; (second) James W. Taylor ; had issue by both husbands. 2. Mary Ann, born in 1805; mar- ried Judge Jeremiah Groate, an early mer- chant of Crane's Village, Montgomery coun- ty, New York ; she survived her husband, and died at Medina, New York, where two daugh- ters and one son reside. 3. Rebecca, born 1807, died at Gloversville, Fulton county, New York, at age of eighty-six; married John Wood, who died without issue. 4. John Og- den, born 1809, died unmarried in Schnec- tady, 1886; he was a lumber dealer and an alderman of that city. 5. Eleanor, born 1811, died in Detroit, Michigan; married Stephen H. Johnson, an attorney of Schenectady and New York City, warden of the State Prison at Sing Sing, New York, in 1864, died at Schenectady, New York, at the age of seven- ty years, leaving a son, Bishop Joseph H. Johnson, first bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Los Angeles, California. 6. Joseph, born 1814, died 1874; he engaged in the lumber business with his brother, John Ogden Hors-
fall; he married Gertrude Hinman, of Lan- singburg, New York, and had two children who died young. 7. Captain William, born in 1816; enlisted in the spring of 1861 in de- fense of his country's flag; was elected captain of a company in the Eighteenth Regi- ment, New York Volunteer Infantry, and met his death while gallantly leading his men during the bloody battle of Antietam ; he was killed instantly, a bullet piercing his heart; he was a good man and a brave soldier ; un- married. 8. Harry, born 1818, died 1900, unmarried. 9. Sarah, born 1820, died 1900; married Howland Swain Barney, founder of the dry goods house of H. S. Barney & Com- pany, a most successful merchant and promi- nent business man, who died in Schenectady, November 14, 1904; no living issue. 10. De- borah, born 1825 in Schenectady; she now (1910) resides in her elegant home built on a site where her entire life has been passed. She is in perfect health, and in a quiet unos- tentatious way supports cheerfully all good causes. She is very charitable and is an ac- tive worker in the Episcopal church despite her eighty-five years. She is the last survivor of the ten children of Joseph and Eleanor (Groate) Horsfall.
(The Groate Line).
The immigrant ancestor of the Groate fam- ily of the Mohawk Valley was Philip Groat, who came from Rotterdam, Holland, to Amer- ica, and in 1716 made a purchase of land near Cranesville, Montgomery county, New York, thirteen miles west of Schenectady. When removing to the latter place he was drowned in the Mohawk by breaking through the ice. He was in a sleigh, and his compan- ion was also drowned. His widow and three sons, Simon, Jacob and Lewis, made the intended settlement on the Cranesville lands. In 1730 the Groat brothers erected a grist mill at their place, believed to have been the first one ever built on the north side of the Mo- hawk. This mill when first erected ground wheat and made flour for the residents upon the German flats some fifty miles distant. The first bolting cloth in this mill was put in by John Burns, a German, in 1772. Prior to this the settlers either lived on unbolted flour unless they sifted it through hand sieves. Lewis Groat, one of three sons of Philip, was a friend of Sir William Johnson. About the time of the revolution, Lewis, a widower with five children, was living upon the Cranesville homestead. He was a comparatively wealthy man, owning the farm and grist mill. One day while standing under a tree on his farm to obtain shelter from a passing shower, he
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was taken prisoner by three Indians, whom he thought to be friendly and allowed to seek the same shelter. He was taken to Canada and after suffering the tortures of all prisoners to the Indians was sold to a French Canadian, Lewis de Snow, who at first treated him cruelly but afterward was his warm friend. When war was declared between England and France, Groat was claimed as a British prisoner, previous to the capture of Quebec, and for six months was imprisoned near Mon- treal, but was finally liberated and returned to his Montgomery county home after an ab- sence of four years and four months, to the great surprise and joy of his family, who had given him up for lost. He again married, and John L. Groat, a son of the second mar- riage, was the father of Judge Jeremiah Groate, who married Mary Horsfall, daughter of Joseph and Eleanor (Groate) Horsfall. Eleanor Groate Horsfall descended from an- other branch of the same family, who settled first in Columbia county, New York. The family name is spelled both Groat, Groate and Groot, although the latter is a distinctive line founded by Simon Simonse Groot in 1645.
STERN The Stern family of Schenectady descend from the ancient Hebrew family of Würtemberg, Germany, where they settled in the town of Kreglingen. They were merchants usually, but many of them settled on farms and followed agricul- ture in some of its many forms.
(I) Hirst (Henry) Stern was born in Würtemberg, Germany, in 1810, died at the age of seventy-four. He was a dry goods merchant, and accumulated a competency. He married (first) Minnie Stern, his cousin, who was born and died in Würtemberg, leaving children : 1. Minnie, married Wendell Stern, a dry goods merchant; two children, one of them, Mrs. Minnie Struble, died in New York City, leaving a son, Max Struble, a business man of that city. 2. Solomon, see forward. 3. Jacob, born 1834: came to the United States when a young man, and settled in Galveston, Texas, where he was a well- known, wealthy merchant. He returned to his home in Germany in latter life, and there died, leaving no issue. Hirst Stern married (second) Fannie Heidenheimer, who survived him, dying in Germany at the age of eighty- five years, having married a second husband Netlinger. By his second marriage there was one child, Nathan, a prominent glass manufacturer of Bavaria, Germany.
(II) Solomon, son of Hirst and Minnie ‘(Stern) Stern, was born in Würtemberg, Ger-
many, in 1832, died in Schenectady, New York, March 22, 1891. He was educated for the Jewish ministry, but his business tenden- cies were so strongly developed that he abandoned his studies and engaged in mer- cantile life. He came to the United States in 1857, and after a few years spent in trade in various localities settled in Schenectady, where he was first clerk in the store of Jonathan Levi. He saved his earnings and soon had a sum sufficient to start a small grocery store of his own. He succeeded by hard work and the assistance of his wife, who shared every burden with him. He was in business twenty- five years, and amassed a comfortable fortune. He and his wife were instrumental in estab- lishing a congregation and erecting the Jew- ish synagogue, and were active supporters. He was a Democrat, and of liberal views and tendencies. He died in 1891. He married, in 1867, in Albany, Fannie S. Wolfsheimer, born in Wykersheim, Würtemberg, Germany, June 24, 1847, and came to the United States in 1859 on the ship "Saxonia." She lived, until her marriage, in Albany with her uncle, Moses Wolfsheimer. She is a well-educated lady with great business ability. After the death of her husband, she continued the business for a time, then disposed of it on favorable terms and removed to Galveston, Texas, where her brother-in-law, Jacob Stern, was in business. She remained in Galveston ten years, and her son, Henry L., had business interests there, which were seriously inter- fered with by the disaster that overtook that city by a tidal wave and flood. He then
closed out his Galveston interests and re- turned to Schenectady, their present home (1910). She is charitable and generous to . those in need. She is a member of the Aux- ilary of the Physicians Hospital, Schenectady, and member of the Jewish Temple of College street. She is a daughter of Lazarus Wolfs- heimer, born in Würtemberg, Germany, 1802, died in 1876. He married Eva Rosenthal, born in the same kingdom in 1805, died 1890. Children : 1. and 2. Louis and Max, died in childhood. 3. Fannie S., married Solomon Stern. 4. Joseph, an importer and merchant of Würtemberg; he had eleven children, of whom Mrs. Max Stackman and Mrs. Harry Friedman are residents of Schenectady. 5. Helen, married Manuel Block, of Albany. Children of Solomon and Fannie S. (Wolfs- heimer) Stern: I. Minnie, married Jacob Jo- seph, of Schenectady; children: Edith and Stanley. 2. Henry L., unmarried ; merchant of Schenectady, dealing in gentlemen's fur- nishings. 3. Sadie, died May 22, 1900, aged twenty-four years. 4. Lester, in business with
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his brother, Henry L. Stern. 5. Theresa, married Dr. William Gammon, a wealthy phy- sician of Galveston, Texas. 6. Isabella, mar- ried Zena Hirsch, a graduate of Perdue Uni- versity ; they reside in Oklahoma city ; he is a contracting electrical engineer of that place. 7. Milton, of New York City.
HYATT This name is quite common in England both in modern times and on old records. It occurs quite frequently on wills in Doctors Commons, London, as Hyat, Hyett and Hiat. The earliest representative of the family whose name is seen on the records in America is Thomas Hyatt, who is named in the will of John Russell, of Dorchester, Massachusetts, as "brother," August 26, 1633. "Thomas Hyet, twenty-two years old," is on a list of passengers from England to Virginia in 1635. Thomas Hyatt was of Stamford, Connecticut, December 7, 1741, when he was granted land. He had issue. Sons, Caleb, John and Thomas. It is from his son John that the Hyatts of Troy probably descend. He removed to West- chester county, New York. "John and Ruth Hiat" were married in 1690.
(I) Nathaniel Hyatt was born in New York, died in Pennsylvania. He was a cooper by trade, also a farmer. He removed to Pennsylvasia, where he purchased and culti- vated a farm, and coal was afterward found to underlie the whole tract. He disposed of his lands at a price that enabled him to retire from active labor. He married and had issue: Betsey, Jolın Sherwood, see forward, Edna.
(II) John Sherwood, son of Nathaniel Hyatt, was born at Heilderburg, Albany county, died in Verona, Oneida county, New York, in 1891, aged eighty-four years. He learned the carpenter's trade and after his re- moval to Fulton did a great deal of contract- ing and building. He was a man of high character, and lived a very successful life. He was the architect of his own fortunes and raised himself above the common level by his own endeavor. He married Lucretia Warner, who died in 1857 at Stratford, New York. Children: Eugene, see forward, and Julia B., married Louis Ransom, an artist.
(III) Eugene, only son of John Sherwood and Lucretia (Warner) Hyatt, was born in Stratford, Fulton county, New York, in May, 1829, died in Troy, New York, September 23, 1895. His early education was obtained in the district schools. He prepared for the practice of law in the offices of Mr. Johnson, of Little Falls. He passed the law board at Albany about 1850, and opened a law office in Lansingburg (Troy). He later removed
to New York City, where he passed two years. Returning to Troy, he again engaged in the practice of his profession, continuing until ill health compelled his retirement, five years previous to his death. For twenty-four years he had as his law partner, Albert C. Com- stock, whose law preceptor he had been. As preceptor, student and partners they were as- sociated for nearly thirty years in the city of Troy. Mr. Hyatt was a Republican, and was a member of the New York assembly one session. He was a member of the Masonic fraternity of Troy, belonging to the lodge, chapter and commandery. He married, Octo- ber 25, 1859, Esther Amelia Ferris, born at Whitestone, Long Island, May 12, 1838 (see Ferris). Children : I. Louis Eugene, born January 17, 1862, in Troy ; a salesman ; mar- ried Anna Van Kirk; children: Thelma and Kenneth. 2. Nathaniel, April 23, 1865 ; pro- fessor of piano, organ, composition and theory in Bishop Doane's School, Albany; married Ethel Embury ; children: Esther and Allen. 3. John Sherwood, January 26, 1867 ; engaged in the insurance business in New York City; married Grace Bowman ; children : Sherwood, Élise, Eugene. Mrs. Eugene Hyatt resides in Troy, New York.
(The Ferris Line).
The Ferris family was originally from Leicestershire, England, the first member of which (in England) was Henry de Feriers, whose father, Master of the house of the Duke of Normandy, obtained from the Con- queror large grants of land in England. Jef- frey Ferries or Ferris is the American an- cestor. He is first heard of in Watertown, Massachusetts, where he was admitted a free- man May 6, 1635. He was later of Wethers- field and Stamford, Connecticut. His first wife, Susannah, widow of Robert Lockwood, died December 23, 1660, at Greenwich, Con- necticut. His second wife, Judy Burns, re- ceipted for her widow's portion of his estate, March 6, 1667. Jeffrey Ferries or Ferris died May 31, 1666. Children: John, Peter, Joseph and James.
(II) John, son of Jeffrey Ferris, was born in Leicestershire, England, in 1649, died in 1753. He emigrated to Fairfield, Connecti- cut (N. E. Hist. and Gen. Reports, vol. 42, P. 331). He removed to Westchester, New York, in 1654, and was one of the first patentees of the town. Bolton says he was "one of the ten proprietors of Throck- morton's Neck in 1667." This name has been attenuated from Throckmorton to Throgg's Neck. He lived to be a great age. His first wife was Mary -, his second
Ougene Hyatt
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Grace He was a member of the So- ciety of Friends, and is so mentioned in the records. Children: Peter, Mary, Samuel, James, see forward; Jonathan, John, Phebe, Martha, Sarah, Hannah, married William Mott and they were the parents of the dis- tinguished surgeon, Dr. Valentine Mott.
(III) James, son of John Ferris, married Anna Sands, of Sands Point, Long Island. He died in 1746, proprietor of "The Home- stead" at Throgg's Neck. Children: Alex- ander, Dr. Lyne, Judge Valentine, Helen, Jon- athan, Mortimer, Edwin, Martha and Elvira.
(IV) Jonathan, son of James and Anna (Sands) Ferris, was of New York City. He was a man of wealth and education. He had large estates in Westchester and much city property. He married Irsula Catlin. Child, John M., see forward.
(V) John M., son of Jonathan and Irsula (Catlin) Ferris, was born at Throgg's Neck, Westchester county, New York, died at Strat- ford, New York, in 1858, aged seventy. He was educated in New York City. Being the son of wealthy parents, he received a good patrimony and never engaged in business. He married Elizabeth Powell, born at White- stone, Long Island, died at Stratford, New York. Children: Ann Augusta, William, George P., John T., Valentine S., Esther Amelia (Mrs. Eugene Hyatt). Both Mr. and Mrs. Ferris were members of the Society of Friends. Mrs. Eugene Hyatt resides in Troy, New York.
CADMAN This is an old English family name, once written Cademans, and is taken from the trade of
cade or barrel maker. The Amsterdam branch of the family in America descend from Christopher Cadman, born in England, who came to America in 1720, settling in southern Connecticut. An earlier record of the family is in Rhode Island, where William Cadman is mentioned in the Portsmouth rec- ords as early as 1659. He was a deputy sev- eral terms, and died in 1684. The families are no doubt connected, as Christopher was a common name in the Rhode Island family. Christopher of Connecticut had issue.
(II) Edward (1), son of Christopher Cad- man, was born in Connecticut and died in Austerlitz, Columbia county, New York. The family had evidently settled there when the father died. His wife survived him and with her two sons, Edward and George, joined in the pioneer emigration north to Saratoga county, New York. There may have been other children of Edward, but they are not of record.
(III) Edward (2), son of Edward (I), was probably born in Connecticut, and after the death of his father he, being the eldest son, became the head of the family. With his mother and brother George, he settled at Saratoga county at a date very early in its history. The country was heavily timbered and peopled with the wild things of the forest that everywhere lurked to do them harm. But like all pioneer men and women, they were stout-hearted and began vigorously wresting a farm and a home from the wilderness. They did clear the farm and did build the home, and saw the country fill up with settlers and become a prosperous community. They en- dured all the discomforts of early pioneer life and braved all its dangers. The mother, brave as the bravest, lived to a good old age, and saw her sons, to whom she was devoted as they were to her, grow to be prosperous men, the heads of families. Their farm was in the town of Providence. There the mother and sons were members of the Christian church, which they were helpful in building and supporting. Edward lived to be an old man. He married and reared a family of two sons and three daughters: I. Henry, see for- ward. 2. Ansel, settled in Gloversville, New York, where he died, leaving a large family. 3. Loretta. She married John McCarthy, a farmer. They settled in Ballston, Saratoga county, where they died, leaving issue. 4. -, married Madison Cornell. They were residents of Sandy Hill, where he was super- intendent of the paper mill. They left issue. 5. Lydia, married Adolphus Kimball, a farmer of Saratoga county. Mrs. Kimball lived to a very old age.
(IV) Henry, son of Edward Cadman (2), was born on the homestead farm in Provi- dence, Saratoga county, New York. He grew up on the farm and was trained by his father to habits of thrift and industry that influenced and benefited his after life. He succeeded his father in the farm manage- ment, but he afterward purchased an estate on which he spent the remainder of his days. He was a well-known character in the town and universally respected for his upright char- acter and manly integrity. For nine years he was town assessor and for several years col- lector. He married Catherine Clark, born in Saratoga, of Dutch ancestry, who bore him two children: I. Charles Marvin (see for- ward), and Inez, who resides in Gloversville, New York, unmarried.
(V) Charles M., only son of Henry and Catherine (Clark) Cadman, was born on the homestead (wrested from the wilderness many years before) in Providence, Saratoga
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county, New York, July 18, 1841. He at- tended the district schools and labored on the farm until he had attained his majority. He had a taste for mechanics and learned the trade of millwright, a very profitable business in those days of grinding grain between great stones that must be carefully milled and set. He became very expert and was kept fully employed until milling methods changed and the machinist was needed rather than the millwright. He then took up carpentering, where his natural tastes were again gratified. In 1880 he removed to Amsterdam, where he has since resided, employed in building operations. He is a member of the Presby- terian church in Amsterdam and a supporter of the Republican party. Mr. Cadman mar- ried (first), in Saratoga county Hattie Sher- man, born in the town of Providence, and died in Amsterdam, December, 1875. She left one child, Scott D., born in Providence, August 7, 1874. He is a carpenter, residing in Scotia, Schenectady county, New York. He married Ollie Dibble and has Marion G. Mr. Cadman married (second), in Amsterdam, Harriet, daughter of George and Eleanor (Duell) Vedder, of Amsterdam. Mr. Ved- der was born in Saratoga county, and died October 4, 1890. Mrs. Vedder, also a native of Saratoga county, resides in Amsterdam. The Vedders are of Dutch ancestry and were both members of the Dutch Reformed church. Mr. and Mrs. Charles M. Cadman have one child, Mary, born January 7, 1886. She was educated in the Amsterdam schools, after which she entered Pratt Institute, a famous school of Brooklyn, New York, where she took the course in costume illustration and de- sign, graduating with the class of 1909. Mrs. and Miss Cadman are members of the Metho- dist Episcopal church of Amsterdam. Mr. Cadman is a member of Montgomery Lodge, Independent Order of Odd Fellows, of Am- sterdam, New York.
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