USA > New York > Hudson-Mohawk genealogical and family memoirs, Volume IV > Part 14
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Howard J. Banker. 2. Joseph A., June II, 1868; married, December 25, 1901, Fannie Martha Russ; children: Dorothy, born Jan- uary 3, 1903; Helen, July, 1905; George, July 17, 1907. 3. Anna C., September 4, 1809. 4. ·Helen E., September 20, 1871 ; married, Sep- tember 3, 1888. Fred W. Pawling ; children : Harold Ballantine, born February 14, 1896; Clarence Wright, June 17, 1898; Helen Bea- trice, February, 1906; Hazel M., July, 1908. 5. Emma Louisa, March 1, 1877.
SHUTTS The progenitor of the Shutts family of Gloversville, New York, was Silas Shutts, born in Canada, October 29, 1807, son of Simon Shutts, who emigrated to Canada from Mas- sachusetts. Silas Shutts came to the United States in 1827, settled in Johnstown, New York, and was an expert lumberman. He died April 26, 1902. He married Ann Maria Smith, born June 25, 1811, in Fulton county, New York, died April 1, 1904. Children: I. Ophelia, born October 27, 1832 ; married, Sep- tember 30, 1851, Miles Ephraim Wheeler; children : Ida, Arnold, Hamilton, Dewitt, May. 2. Emily, born August 27, 1834 ; married, Oc- tober 25, 1853, James Holcomb ; children : Anabel, Burton James, Carrie M., Edward. 3. De Witt, born October 17, 1836, died August 5. 1862. 4. Mary Elizabeth, born August 7, 1838; married, October 11, 1863, Rev. Henry Wright ; children : Mary E., Joseph A., Anna C., Helen E., Emma L. 5. Cordelia, born March 3, 1840; married, February 8, 1865, Dr. John E. Burdick; both deceased; no chil- dren. 6. Harlan Page, see forward. 7. Wil- liam L., born April 25, 1846; married Altana Fosmire; children : Howard, a regular in the United States army ; and Burton A., married Emily D. Philips. 9. Minerva, born February 16, 1848 ; married, September 14, 1871, James F. Rice, born May 28, 1845. 10. Edward D., born May 16, 1850. II. Ella C., born May 26, 1852 ; married, February 12, 1879, Charles H. Powell, born September 23, 1846: children : Roscoe, born November 25, 1879; John, born May 1, 1883. 12. Howard, born April 6. 1855, died September 28, 1862.
(II) Harlan Page, third child of Silas and Ann Maria (Smith) Shutts, was born in l'ul- ton county, New York. October 2, 1841. He was educated in the public schools, and after completing his studies his father took him to the lumber camps with him, where he re- mained three years. He then began life on his own account. He obtained employment on the canal, and took the eastern trip as far as Albany, and returned west as far as Orrsville, where he decided he was not fitted for canal
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life and took sudden leave. He worked as clerk in the general store of William Putnam for two years, then returned to Gloversville, and entered the employ of Jonathan Ricketts, where he learned the trade of glove making. Later in life he formed a partnership with Denton Smith, and as Shutts & Smith manu- factured gloves and mittens until 1875, when the firm dissolved. Mr. Shutts then engaged in the sewing machine business, which he car- ried on with successful results until 1909. Since 1885 he has been a partner of E. S. Parkhurst & Company, and is also interested in western mining lands, the Glen Telephone Company, the Gloversville Knitting Mill and other enterprises of his city. He has been a member of the Knights of Pythias for forty- two years and is past chancellor and past chancellor commander of the local lodge. Politically he is a Republican.
He married, January, 1888, Sarah Elizabeth, born November 7, 1845, daughter of Cornelius and Sarah Ann ( Gonsaulus ) Fonda, and grand- daughter of Peter Fonda, a descendant of Jil- lis Fonda, the gunmaker of Schenectady, the grandson of Jillis Douwerse, the founder, of Beverwyck as early as 1654. Sarah Ann (Gonsaulus) Fonda was born July 20, 1820, died January 31, 1893. She married Cornelius Fonda, born February 5, 1820. They had twelve children: 1. Mary Jane, born October 4, 1840, died August 31, 1879 ; married, Feb- ruary 22, 1858, Benjamin Van Buren. 2. Catherine, March 16, 1842; married, Decem- ber 29, 1860, James Bancroft. 3. Charles Wes- ley. December 1, 1843, died October 14, 1909. 4. Sarah Elizabeth, married Harlan P. Shutts. 5. IIenrietta, March 15, 1847; married, Feb- ruary 22, 1864, Henry A. Dopp. 6. Gradsir (?), April 26, 1849. 7. James M., October 30, 1851 ; married Elizabeth Sweet. 8. Har- riet, July 29, 1853. 9. William H., March 8, 1855: married Jennie Young. 10. Ida F., June 13, 1857, died October 27, 1895 ; married a Mr. Nellis. 11. Edwin L., January 21, 1859; married, September 25, 1890. Jennie Wells. 12. Margaret M., April 8, 1862.
STEVENS
The Stevens family is of Eng- lish origin and in 1620 were living in Cornwall and Berk-
shire counties, England. Nathaniel Gove Stevens, born September 14, 1786, is de- scended from a member of this family who emigrated to America and was one of the first settlers in Warwick, Massachusetts. His father, also named Nathaniel Gove Stev- ens, was born April 7, 1752; married Lois Stowe, of Marlboro, Massachusetts, born 1752, died 1813; children as fol-
lows: Lois, Abel, Simon, Anna, Nathaniel Gove, Jr., Samuel. Besides being a prosper- ous farmer, Nathaniel Gove, Jr., successfully managed a saw mill and tan yard. He rafted lumber down the Connecticut river. In re- ligion he was a Unitarian. He married Nancy Stoughton. Children : Nathaniel Edwin, Sarah, married a Mr. McClenathan, Lois C., Charles, Mariah, Timothy Gilbert, Samuel Stoughton.
(II) Samuel Stoughton, son of Nathaniel Gove and Nancy (Stoughton) Stevens, was born at Warwick, Franklin county, Massachu- setts, August 25, 1829. He acquired his edu- cation in the schools of his native village. In 1848 he went on a raft to South Hadley Falls. He journeyed from there to Hartford, Con- necticut, and other places, seeking a shop to learn the machinists' trade. In Worcester, Massachusetts, he engaged with the firm of Goddard & Rice, tool makers, and manufactur- ers of paper machinery, his only remuneration being board and lodging. He remained until the expiration of his apprenticeship, when he accepted a position with Severance & Tourt- lotte, who with others, had established a works for building paper machinery, taking the posi- tion of foreman. He remained with this firm three years in Hartford, Connecticut. From there he went to Troy, New York, to set up a machine which he had superintended in building for A. W. Orr & Company, with whom he remained five years. In 1858, in connection with the Orrs, he purchased the North Hoosick mill, which had been partly fitted up for making wrapping paper. He completed this mill to make hanging paper, and in a short time brought the production from one ton per day to that of two tons. He remained with the Orrs for about twelve years. In 1869, after the death of Alexander Orr and William O. Cunningham, he, with George S. Thompson, bought out the interest of the Orrs and continued the business under the firm name of Stevens & Thompson. In 1874 Stevens & Thompson in connection with R. H. Thompson, leased the Walloomsac Pa- per Mill, formerly owned and managed by Austin and Pratt. After running this mill for a term of six years they purchased the prop- erty from Henry Smith, of New York, and immediately commenced enlarging the plant. This in connection with the North Hoosick mill brought the production up to considerable over twenty tons per day.
Mr. Stevens, assisted by his son Frank L. Stevens, had exclusive charge of the me- chanical departments. He had made several valuable inventions for which he had secured patents. The first, for a continuous process of the treatment of paper stock in the form of old
HUDSON AND MOHAWK VALLEYS
papers, by which the stock is not handled from the time it is put into the duster until it comes out on the machine in the form of paper. Another is a variable speed device for paper machines. His third invention is a centrifugal continuous process pulp dryer. In recent years he had introduced into this line several specialities of paper, the manufacturing of which his younger son, Fred N. Stevens, has full charge. Samuel S. Stevens married Marcia Maria Lamberton, of Ware, Massa- chusetts, daughter of Gideon Lamberton, born in Ware, 1798, died at the same place in 1892. He was a prosperous farmer, a Re- publican in politics and a member of the Pres- byterian church. He married in Ware and had three children : 1. Alfred, born in Ware, died in Oregon, not married. 2. Melzar, died in Gilbertville. Massachusetts, married and had two children : i. Walter, died at age of twenty- four at North Hoosick about 1884; ii. Clara, married Fred Barlow and had two children : Marian, Stanley. 3. Marcia Maria, born July 18. 1830, died in North Hoosick, May 17, 1904. Children of Samuel Stoughton and Marcia Maria (Lamberton) Stevens : I. Anna Maria, married Hiland Carpenter, of North Hoosick, New York ; four children : Warwick, Harold, Samuel (deceased) ; and Marcia. 2. Lois, married Arthur Bolton Cobden, cashier of People's Bank of Lansingburg ; one child, Allen Stevens, born September 22. 1892. 3. Frank Lamberton, see forward. 4. Fred Na- thaniel, see forward.
(III) Captain Frank Lamberton, eldest son of Samuel Stoughton and Marcia Maria (Lamberton) Stevens, was born October 28, 1864. He was educated at the Worcester Polytechnic Institute, and early began his ca- reer in the paper making industry. Ife en- tered the mills of Stevens & Thompson in 1884, and continued until the incorporation in 1903, when he was elected vice-president, an office which he still holds. He is also vice- president of the Walloomsac Paper Company, a corporation in which he has been interested since 1900, when he purchased in connection with his brother, Fred N., the interest former- ly held by his father, Samuel Stoughton Ste- vens. Frank L. has always been closely asso- ciated with the practical side of paper making, and was his father's assistant in the exclusive charge of the mechanical department of the mills. To a thoroughly practical knowledge of paper making he adds executive ability of a high order, which is recognized by his asso- ciates in the various corporations in which he holds official positions. Ile is president of the Noble & Wood Machine Company, of Hoo- sick Falls, New York; vice-president of The
Stevens & Thompson Papri Compiay ceid dle Falls, New York, and a dire ha unt the First National Bank, Hoosick. Fall. Sew York. He served in the National Guard, New York, and during the Spanish- American war was captain in the Second Regiment of Infantry. He was captain of the Thirty-sec- ond Separate Company, New York National Guard, with which he had served sixteen years. He is a Republican in politics and in 1904-05 represented his district in the New York State assembly. Mr. Stevens is a mem- ber of Van Rensselaer Lodge, No. 400, Free and Accepted Masons, of Hoosick Falls, New York; Raymond Chapter, No. 248, Royal Arch Masons, of Hoosick Falls, Hoosick Falls Lodge, Benevolent Protective Order of Elks, and exalted ruler (1910) of that body. Ile is a member of the Hoosic' Club, the Pafraets Dael Club of Troy, and the Army and Navy Club of New York. He married. February 20, 1884. Frederica, daughter of Joseph Carl and Katherine (Schaffer) Wallich, of Detroit, Michigan. Joseph Carl Wallich was born at Trier-on-the-Rhine, Germany, in 1833. He learned the trade of cabinetmaker, which then included pianos and weaving machinery, the latter an important branch. Ile came to the United States in 1851, locating first at Cleve- land, later in Berea, Ohio. During the civil war he was selected as carpenter to an engi- neering corps, his ability in construction being well known to the officer in charge. In 1862 he settled in Detroit, where he purchased a residence, now 405 Cass avenue, then far in the country surrounded by woods. Ile be- came a prominent contractor and builder. com- pleting several important government contracts including the post office and Marine Hospital buildings. He was deeply interested in the study of anthropology and was deeply versed in his favorite study. He was a source of wonder to the professional men with whom he conversed. His last words expressed his life ambition "Ein guter erieirchterungs sim." (A good. well-enlightened perception.) He was at different times a member of the Concor- dia and Harmonic Singing Societies, and was affiliated with Zion Lodge, No. 1, Free and Accepted Masons. He married, at Berea, Ohio, Katherine Schaffer. Children : Charles W., of Detroit, Michigan : Claud, superinten- dent of fisheries at Yes Bay, Alaska : Fred- erica, married Frank L. Stevens: Julia Mi- netta. married Fred N. Stevens, of whom fur- ther ; Lilly, married Gustav R. Schimmel, of Detroit : Wilhimina, of New York City, un- married : Julius of Buffalo, New York : Cath- erine, married George R. Doemling, of De- troit. Mr. Wallich died at Detroit, Michigan,
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at the age of seventy-three years. The chil- dren of Frank L. and Frederica (Wallich) Stevens : Lois, born December 18, 1892 ; Chris- tian, June 30, 1897 ; Samuel Stoughton, Sep- tember 2, 1901.
(III) Fred Nathaniel, son of Samuel Stoughton and Marcia Maria (Lamberton) Stevens, was born at North Hoosick, Janu- ary 3. 1868. He was educated in the public schools of the district and at private schools, Peekskill Military Academy, Graylock Insti- tute, South Williamstown, Massachusetts, Wil- liston Seminary at East Hampton, Massachu- setts, Boston Institute of Technology, Boston, Massachusetts, one year. He entered the pa- per manufacturing business with his father in the firm of Stevens & Thompson. In 1900 he, with his brother, Frank L., bought out his father's interest in the Walloomsac Paper Company. They successfully operated as a firm until 1906, when they incorporated, with Fred N. Stevens as secretary. The business of this corporation is the manufacture of wall paper. Mr. Stevens is also secretary of Ste- vens & Thompson, Incorporated, manufac- turers of wall, filter, manilla, and tissue paper. The corporations are well managed and suc- cessful and add materially to the prosperity of the villages in which their works and of- fices are located. Walloomsac and North Hoo- sick. Mr. Stevens is a director of the Peo- ple's Bank of Hoosick Falls, New York, pres- ident of the Hudson Valley Humane Society (Hoosick branch), member of the Church of Christ (Scientist), member of the board of governors of the Hoosick Club. In politics a Republican and fraternally an "Elk." He married, January 27, 1892, Julia Minetta Wal- lich, born in Detroit, Michigan, daughter of Joseph Carl Wallich, who was born at Trier- on-the-Rhine, Germany, 1833. Children : Frederick Wallich, born October 12, 1892, died February 28, 1901: Carl Wallich, born June 24. 1894. entered Culver Military Acad- emy. Culver, Indiana, for 1910-11; Marcia Lamberton.
STEVENS (II) Gilbert Timothy Stevens,* son of Nathaniel Gove (q. v.) and Nancy (Stoughton ) Stev- ens, was born May 23. 1827, at Warwick, Massachusetts, died at Walpole, New Hamp- shire. November 25, 1897. He was hy trade a tanner and currier, but gave up his trade when a young man to become a farmer. About 1859 he removed to Walpole, New Hamp- shire, where he took prominent part in church
and town affairs. He was an active Repub- lican, a member of the Christian church. He married, November 25, 1853, Elizabeth Ar- nold, now living in Walloomsac, New York, with her son William N. She is the daughter of William Arnold, see forward. Children of Mr. and Mrs. Stevens : William Nathaniel, see forward; Josephine Elizabeth, born Walpole, New Hampshire, January 14, 1856, died Jan- uary 18, 1871.
(III) William Nathaniel, son of Gilbert Timothy and Elizabeth (Arnold) Stevens, was born in Warwick, Massachusetts, March 4, 1855. He was educated in Walpole's common and high schools. He learned the machinist's trade, but left it to become a bookkeeper and assistant superintendent for his uncle, Nath- aniel Edwin Stevens, at Winchester, New York, a farmer and currier. where he re- mained four years. In July, 1883, he removed to Walloomsac where he accepted a position as bookkeeper with the Walloomsac Paper Company ; he is still with them, having been promoted to assistant superintendent. He owns and runs a farm of one hundred and fifty acres which he bought in 1906. It is his- toric ground, being land on which the first part of the battle of Bennington was fought, where Colonel Baum came to seize stores and was reinforced on this land. It is now called Hessian Hill. He is in the retail coal busi- ness in Walloomsac. He is a Republican, active in town affairs, having held the office of justice of the peace from 1901 to 1910, interested in education, having been trustee of the school district for several years. He is notary public, first appointed under the ad- ministration of governor David B. ITill. He is a prominent member of the Presbyterian church of Hoosick Falls ; he was elected elder September 20. 1880, has been trustee since 1902, and has been clerk of the sessions since 1907. He has been elected several times to the Presbytery and by the Presbytery to the Synod in 1906, and also by the Presbytery to the general session of the Presbyterian Church of America in 1907. He has served several years as superintendent of the Sab- bath school and is a member of the Christian Endeavor Society. When the Presbyterian church was repaired in 1897-98, he was on the building committee and rendered efficient service. He is a member of the Masonic Order, having been made a Mason at Phile- cian Lodge, No. 40, Winchester, New Hamp- shire, in 1881, demitting from that lodge in 1886 and joining -Van Rensselaer Lodge at Hoosick Falls, New York. He is a Royal Arch Mason of Raymond Chapter, No. 248, Hoosick Falls, and has filled all the principal
*In some branches of the family this name appears as Timothy Gilbert Stevens.
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chairs including election to the office of high priest, an honor he felt impelled to decline. He is past worthy patron of Van Rensselaer Chapter, No. 161, Order of Eastern Star, of Hoosick, having served two years. His social club is the Hoosick of Hoosick Falls.
William N. Stevens married (first) Jane E. Watkins, by whom he had one son, Wil- liam Earl, born in Walpole, 1878. He is living in Bellows Falls, Vermont, a machinist by trade. He is now engaged in a machinery and jobbing repair shop. He married Es- tella Willington and has three children : Wil- liam N. Stevens, married (second) October 13. 1886, at Hoosick Falls, Katherine Helen, daughter of Thomas Moses, who was a son of Dr. Salmon Moses. Children of second wife: Mary Elizabeth, born September 28, 1887, died June 21, 1900; Nathaniel Edwin, March 4. 1889, died June 29, 1900; John Has- well, June 18, 1891, died March 16, 1896; Katherine Lois, July 28, 1892, died March 20, 1906: Ruth, November 30, 1897: Helen Jea- nette, November 16, 1900; Naomi and Anna, twins. March 19, 1903. Naomi died March 19. 1903, Anna died December 23, 1903.
William Arnold, grandfather of William N. Stevens, was born in Westmoreland, New Hampshire, March 29, 1792. He learned the machinist's trade, and worked at that busi- ness in his younger days. At what time he ·came to Walpole is not known, but at one time he worked for Thomas Moore as a hired man on his farm, and married one of his daughters, Naomi, October 3, 1822, who was born September 14, 1795. After his mar- riage he worked at his trade a while in Paw- tucket, Rhode Island, where some of his chil- dren were born. He returned to Walpole and purchased the Robinson tavern stand and commenced keeping a public house in 1837, in which business he continued till the building of the Cheshire railroad, when the tavern keeping was relinquished. When he com- menced keeping tavern there was a large amount of travel over the road that passed his house, it being the third New Hampshire turnpike. Here, he and his wife did their best to please, thereby securing a good share of customers, who were sure to be well cared for. After he relinquished tavern keeping, he turned his attention to farming, which oc- cupation he followed till the infirmities of age caused him to suspend labor. He died Au- gust 27, 1876. Children : Elizabeth, born May 22. 1823 : married (first) Levi Winchester, of Westmoreland ; one son, Frank L .: married (second) Gilbert Timothy Stevens, had two children : Mary P., born September 27, 1824, married O. H. P. Watkins, May 14, 1847;
three children: William, born December 26, 1826, married Mary S. Stevens, of Warwick, Massachusetts, September, 1852: three chil- dren : Sarah Jane, born August 29, 1828, mar- ricd Henry D. Bacon, and has one daughter, Sophia, born July 19, 1834. married Nelson Johnson, October 19, 1865: two children ; Frances N., born March 2, 1836, married George A. Sherman, June 13, 1866; no issue.
John Moses of Plymouth, Massachusetts, ancestor of Katherine Helen (Moses) Stev- ens. was a shipwright : he came to New Eng- land between 1630 and 1640. He died Octo- ber 14, 1683.
(II) John (2), son of John (I) Moses, settled at Windsor, Connecticut, previous to 1647. He was a soldier of Captain John Mason's troop of horse. He married Mary Brown, May 18. 1653. He died October 14, 1683; she died September 14. 1689. Children, John, William. Thomas, Mary, Sarah. Nath- aniel. Dorcas, Margaret, Timothy, Martha and Mindwell.
(III) John (3). son of John (2) Moses, settled in Simsbury, Connecticut, on his fath- er's farm near Mount Philip. He married Deborah Thrall, July 14, 1680. She belonged to the Puritan church, November 10, 1697, of forty-three persons. She died May 16, 1715. Children : John, Deborah, William, Thomas, Joshua, Deborah, Caleb (1), Oth- niel, Moses. Caleb (2), Mary and Martha.
(IV) Joshua, son of John (3) Moses, mar- ried (first) December 12, 1717. Hannah Strickland. She died January 16. 1718 or 1719, leaving twins three days old. He mar- ried (second) June 28. 1722, Mary Brook. He deeded lands in New Hartford in 1744 and 1745. We find in Norfolk records, deeds July 2, 1772, from "Joshua the elder to son Joshua." Also be bought lands in Norfolk in 1769. He died February 6, 1773. of an eating cancer of the mouth, aged about eigh- ty-five years. By his will dated September 18, 1772. he leaves property to "Sons Joshua Othniel and John: to daughters Hannah, Mary and Rachel." Children: Hannah and Mary, twins; Rachel, Joshua, Othniel and John.
(V) Joshua (2), son of Joshua (1) Moses, resided in Norwalk, Connecticut. From Nor- walk town records we find that on April 24, 1760. "Joshua Moses of Simsbury bought land in Norfolk of Matthew Phelps." Also a deed July 2, 1772, from "Joshua the elder to son Joshua." In the distribution of the estate of Joshua Moses, November 4. 1795, Norfolk, Pro. Rec. mention is made of wife Abigail and the reservation of a "shop" to Jonathan ; then further distribution is made
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to Joshua, Thomas, Jonathan, Abigail Palmer and Jesse Moses and "heirs of Joshua." Pre- vious to this are recorded several deeds No- vember 30, 1792, for "love and good will" to "son Jesse" "son Thomas," "son Joshua Jr.," and September 17, 1794, to Jesse Moses from "his honored father." It seems a little singular that a son Jonah was left out of this distribution as we find in Norfolk records this entry: "Jonah Moses, son of Joshua Moses and Abigail, his wife, born October 25, 1777." In the history of the Terry fam- ily, we learn that Abigail Terry, born Janu- ary 18, 1740, married Joshua Moses, of Nor- folk.
(VI) Thomas, son of Joshua (2) Moses, was born July 19, 1768, died September 24, 1851. He spent his life on his father's old homestead at Norfolk, Connecticut. He mar- ried (first) November 24, 1791, Abigail Brown, born August 17, 1769, died February 16, 1823. He married (second) November II, 1839, Caroline Brown. Children: Sal- mon, Thomas, Jr., Ralph, Benjamin, Hiram, Betsy. Julia, Eunice, Abigail, Ruth.
(VII) Dr. Salmon, son of Thomas and Abigail (Brown) Moses, was educated at Hamilton (New York) College, and had a large practice as a physician at Hoosick Falls, New York. An interesting letter from him is published in the History of Norfolk, Con- necticut. He was a zealous churchman, read- ing service for several years in the school house, until funds were provided to build the present St. Mark's Episcopal Church at Hoosick Falls. He married, February 18, 1823, Sarah Haswell. Children : Robert Has- well, Harriet Haswell, Sarah Julia, Thomas Salmon, Elizabeth Tweedale, Cynthia IIas- well, Mary, Charles Arthur.
(VIII) Thomas Salmon, son of Dr. Sal- mon and Sarah ( Haswell) Moses, was born June 23, 1828, died April 28, 1902. Ile re- sided at Bennington, Vermont. He married Mary Ann Whitehead, of Hoosick Falls, New York. Children: Jane, Maria, Francis, Wil- liam, Catherine H., Thomas, Walter, Martha, Harriet, Alice.
ALBRIGIIT
Among the Dukes of Aus- tria between 976 and 1493 was Albrecht II, who
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