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GENEALOGY COLLECTION
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ALLEN COUNTY PUBLIC LIBRARY 3 1833 02143 8178
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GEN, ANTHONY WAYNE.
From the Painting by Trumbull.
Colonial and Revolutionary Families of Pennsylvania )
Benealogical and Personal Itlemois
EDITOR JOHN W. JORDAN, LL.D.
Historical Society of Pennsylvania Ex-General Registrar of Sons of the Revolution and Registrar of Pennsylvania Society
VOLUME III
NEW YORK CHICAGO
THE LEWIS PUBLISHING COMPANY
GC 974.8 (71; V.3
19II
Copyright THE LEWIS PUBLISHING COMPANY
1911
1317991
CALVIN WELLS
CALVIN WELLS, of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, derived his membership in the Sons of the American Revolution, from the Revolutionary service of his great- grandfather, Lieutenant Samuel Wells, and of his grandfather, Colonel Daniel v Wells, who when but a lad of fourteen and one-half years, marched on the V) "Lexington Alarm" in the company of his kinsman, Captain Agrippa Wells, from the town of Greenfield, Massachusetts. He saw much service both in the Revolutionary War and in the subsequent subduing of the Indians.
The founder of the Welles (the original spelling) family in England, it is agreed, was Robert de Welles or de Euille, one of the Norman lords, who came over with the Conqueror, and whose name appears on the Roll of Battle Abbey as R. de Euilles. The family arms are : "Or, a lion, rampant, sable. Crest : A demi-lion, rampant, sable. Motto: Semper paratus.
HUGH WELLS, born in Essex county, England, about 1590, was the American ancestor of the family. He was a son of Thomas Wells, a wealthy English- man. The date of his coming to America is in doubt. It is given as being in 1630 and again in 1635. It is most likely that he came in 1635 in the ship "Globe" with his brother Richard and landed at either Salem or Boston. He removed to Connecticut in 1636, was for a short time resident of Hartford, then removed to Wethersfield, Connecticut, where he died in 1645. Another brother of Hugh Wells was Thomas, governor of Connecticut, 1655-58-59. He was the ancestor of Gideon Welles, Lincoln's secretary of the navy. The Con- necticut records note that Ensign Hugh Wells was the first of the name in Wethersfield. The surname of Hugh's wife is not known; her Christian name was Frances. She remarried and died in March, 1678. The children of Hugh and Frances Wells were: I. Thomas, see forward. 2. Hugh, born about 1625, died December 22, 1678, was a carpenter, married Mary Roscoe. 3. Mary, born 1626, died July 3, 1700, married, 1650, Jonathan G. Marshal, of Hart- ford, Connecticut. 4. John, born 1628, married Sarah -, settled in Hat- field, Massachusetts.
THOMAS WELLS, eldest son of Hugh and Frances Wells, was born in Eng- land about 1620, died in Hadley, Massachusetts, in 1676. He removed from Wethersfield, Connecticut, to Hadley, Massachusetts, in 1659, as one of the "en- gagers to settle that town". "He left a goodly estate in Connecticut and houses and lands in England" (Sheldon). He married in May, 1650, Mary, daughter of William Beardsley, of Hartford, Connecticut. She bore him four- teen children, who are the progenitors of nearly all the numerous Wells name. This large family of Thomas Wells forms an interesting element in Mrs. Mary P. Wells Smith's "Young Puritan" series of juvenile books. She her- self was a descendant of Noah Wells, one of the fourteen children. The chil- dren were: I. Thomas, born January 10, 1652, died 1691. 2. Mary, October I, 1653, died young. 3. Sarah, May 5, 1655 (Mrs. David Hoyt), died 1676. 4. John, January 4, 1657, died young. 5. Jonathan, 1659, died January 3, 1738.
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6. John, April 3, 1660, drowned January 20, 1678. 7. Samuel, 1662. 8. Mary September 8, 1664 (Mrs. Stephen Belding, later Mrs. Joseph Field), died 1751. 9. Noah, July 26, 1666. 10. Hannah, July 4, 1668 (Mrs. John White). II. Ebenezer, see forward. 12. Daniel, 1670, died young. 13. Ephraim, April 1671. 14. Joshua, February 18, 1673.
EBENEZER WELLS, seventh son of Thomas and Mary (Beardsley) Wells, was born in Hadley, Massachusetts, July 20, 1669. In 1687 grants of four home acre lots and twenty acre farm lots were made to Ebenezer Wells and some fifteen others on the Green river. This was the beginning of the town of Greenfield. The present Main street of Greenfield was selected as the site for the home lots of four acres each. The lots were distributed by lot and Ebenezer Wells drew No. I, which was at the west end of the town on the brow of the hill overlooking Green river. This property was until recently still owned in the family. The French and Indian War ("King William's War") lasting from 1689 to 1698 was nearly fatal to such weak and exposed points as the Green river settlement. For better protection the settlers aban- doned their homes and lived in the shelter of the fortifications on the town street. Lands were cultivated in common, those nearest the town, without re- gard to ownership. Ebenezer Wells married, December 4, 1690, Mary, daugh- ter of Sergeant Benjamin Waite, the scout and Indian fighter, famed in the annals of the period. He was killed by the Indians at Deerfield, 1703-04. Her mother Martha, with her three daughters, Mary (Mrs. Wells), aged six years, Martha, four, and Sarah, two, were among the number captured by the In- dians in their raid on Hatfield, September 19, 1677. Their awful journey to Canada and their rescue by their husband and brother, Benjamin Waite and Stephen Jennings Waite, is told in Judd's "History of Hadley," Sheldon's "History of Deerfield," and retold with fascinating interest in the fourth vol- ume of the "Young Puritan" series. Mary, twelve years after her rescue from captivity, became the wife of Ebenezer Wells. Their children were: I. Ebene- zer, born September 13, 1691, died June 12, 1758. 2. Thomas, September 25, 1693, died March 7, 1743, had ten children. 3. Joshua, August 31, 1695, died April 21, 1768, had fourteen children. 4. Martha, September 18, 1697 (Mrs. Edward Allen). 5. John, see forward. 6. Jonathan, September 26, 1702, died February, 1797, had eight children. The date of the death of Mary (Waite) Wells is not recorded. On August 15, 1705, Ebenezer Wells married Sarah, daughter of Samuel Smith, and widow of John Lawrence, killed by the In- dians in 1694. One child was born of this marriage: Mary, October 24, 1707 (Mrs. Aaron Graves). How long Ebenezer Wells lived in Greenfield is not recorded, but he remained the necessary time to perfect his title to the lands granted him as they were not forfeited like many of others. He returned to Hadley, where he died.
JOHN WELLS, fourth son of Ebenezer and Mary (Waite) Wells, was born at the Green river settlement (Greenfield), June 9, 1700, died March 10, 1746. He was a soldier in Father Rasle's French and Indian War, 1724-25. He owned land in the settlement and is recorded as one of the early settlers. The Indian warfare delayed the permanent settlement of Greenfield and it is not known just when he took up his residence there. In 1727, peace being estab- lished, steps were taken for the permanent settlement of the town, and John
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Wells, his brother Joshua, and several other members of the family established their homes in Greenfield. John Wells was made a colonel of militia. He married Sarah, daughter of Samuel Allen, of Windsor, Connecticut, proba- bly in 1727. Their children were: I. Samuel, born October 28, 1729, see for- ward. 2. Sarah, March 16, 1731 (Mrs. Colonel Samuel Wyman). 3. John February 16, 1734, had seven children. 4. Daniel, August 17, 1735, killed in the "Bloody Morning Scout". 5. Susanna, September 2, 1737, died May 12, 1740. 6. Elijah, July 20, 1740. 7. Susanna, January 3, 1742 (Mrs. Aaron Phelps), died January 3, 1761. 8. Thomas, October 31, 1745, had eleven chil- dren.
LIEUTENANT SAMUEL WELLS, eldest son of John and Sarah (Allen) Wells, was born in Greenfield, Massachusetts, October 28, 1729. He was very promi- nent in Greenfield town affairs. He served as selectman and assessor. For seven years he was town clerk and for five of these years also town treasurer. He was an ardent patriot. September 13, 1774, with six others, he was elected a delegate from Greenfield to the provincial or county congress. On March 29, 1775, he was appointed a member of the town's Committee of Correspond- ence. May 3, 1776, he was commissioned lieutenant in Captain Ebenezer Arms company, Sixth Massachusetts Regiment, and was in active service in 1776 and 1777. In 1780, being then fifty-one years of age, he resigned owing to in- firmities which made him "no longer able to serve the public cause usefully". The student of family history must not confuse Lieutenant Samuel with his cousin Samuel, who was nearly of the same age, but who removed to Brattle- boro, Vermont, in 1762, and was such an active Tory that he received grants of land in Canada for his services to the Crown. He was also Lieutenant Sam- uel. Neither must he be confounded with his own son, Colonel Samuel Wells. Samuel Wells, the father, was known in later life as Colonel Wells, rather than by his own title of Lieutenant. He married, November II, 1751, Margaret, daughter of John McCrellis, of Colerain, Massachusetts. She was born in 1729, died May 25, 1801.
He early established his home in Greenfield, and in 1752, one year before the town was incorporated, he built the "Wells house", which stood for four or five generations at the west and main street near the top of the hill. It has only recently been removed. It was the Wells' homestead for all those years. The children of Lieutenant Samuel and Margaret (McCrellis) Wells were: I. John, born October 8, 1754, died May 21, 1813, settled in Rowe, Massachu- setts ; married (first) Mary Wells, October 11, 1778, married (second) July 14, 1798, Elizabeth May. 2. Daniel, see forward. 3. Margaret, October 4, 1766 (Mrs. Ruel Williard). 4. Colonel Samuel, December 3, 1769, died January 29, 1836; he was a leading citizen of Greenfield for many years; in 1807 he was commissioned lieutenant-colonel of militia; he married Electa Bascom, and had thirteen children, ten sons and three daughters.
DANIEL WELLS, second son of Lieutenant Samuel and Margaret (McCrellis) Wells, was born in Greenfield, Massachusetts, October 2, 1760, died there, July 26, 1815. He was but fourteen and a half years old when the Revolutionary war broke out, but he enlisted in the patriot army as a private in the company of his cousin, Captain Agrippa Wells, Colonel Samuel Williams' regiment, in1 response to the Lexington Alarm of April 19, 1775. He continued to serve
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until after the battle of Bennington in August, 1777. After the Revolution he served for many years in the state militia and was successively commissioned ensign, captain, and in 1800, lieutenant-colonel. He removed to Guilford, Ver- mont, in 1788, but soon returned to Greenfield. He was town clerk and treas- urer of Greenfield from 1793 to 1809. He was one of the incorporators of Greenfield's first water company, that supplied the town until 1869. The name of Colonel Daniel Wells appears in a list of Greenfield's prominent men in 1801 and his occupation is given as "Farmer". His home at the corner of Wells and Main street, subsequently the home of his son, Judge Daniel Wells, is still in a good state of preservation.
He married, October 26, 1781, Rhoda, born in 1761, died July 20, 1833, daughter of John Newton, of Greenfield, the latter the brother of Rev. Roger Newton, who for fifty-six years, beginning in 1761, was the minister at Green- field. Her great-grandfather, Rev. Roger Newton, was ordained the first min- ister of Farmington, Connecticut, and his wife, Mary (Hooker ) Newton, was the daughter of Rev. Thomas Hooker, the first minister of Hartford, Connect- icut. The children of Colonel Daniel and Rhoda (Newton) Wells, all born in Greenfield, Massachusetts, were : 1. Sarah, born July 1, 1783, died March 4, 1843. 2. Sabra, February 3, 1785, died March 21, 1867; married, November 12, 1805, Elijah Alvord. He was an influential member of the Massachusetts bar to which he was admitted in 1802. He served in the legislature in 1812, was register of probate of Franklin county, and clerk of the Judicial Courts. They were the parents of three daughters, and two sons, James Church and Daniel Wells Alvord, both eminent lawyers and prominent in Massachusetts political affairs. 3. Calvin, see forward. 4. Daniel, born June 14, 1791, died June 23, 1854. He graduated from Dartmouth College in 1810; studied law and was the head of the Franklin county ( Massachusetts) bar for many years; served in the State Legislature both in the House (1826) and Senate (1837). He was district attorney for the four western counties of Massachusetts, from 1837 to 1844. In 1844 he was appointed chief justice of the Court of Common Pleas, which office he held for life. He married, in Preble, New York, October 7, 1823, Mary Duncan, who died May 29, 1882. They had three sons and three daughters. One son, George Duncan, was killed at the battle of Cedar Creek, Virginia, October 13, 1864. 5. Franklin, born June 10, 1793, died September 28, 1845; removed to Grafton, Lorain county, Ohio, where he taught the first school ever held there. He was the second justice of the peace and afterward associate judge of Lorain county. He married, September 12, 1824, Mary Sibly, also a pioneer teacher of Lorain county. Her family was from Great Bar- rington, Massachusetts. Six children were born to them, three of whom met accidental deaths in childhood. 6. Rhoda Adeline, born March 14, 1798, died March 23, 1858; married Justus Preston, in 1848. They removed to Byron, New York, and later to Grafton, Ohio. They were the parents of two sons and four daughters.
CALVIN WELLS, eldest son of Colonel Daniel and Rhoda (Newton) Wells, was born at Greenfield, Massachusetts, April 22, 1787. His name is recorded in a list, which has been preserved, of the older scholars attending school in Greenfield during the winter of 1801-02. He removed from Greenfield to Genesee county, New York in 1815, first to Bergen, then to Byron, which was
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his home for many years. His early experiences in Western New York were those of the pioneer in a timbered country, logging, cutting and clearing. He was a farmer and in addition operated a custom gristmill and sawmill on Black Creek. He became a prominent man in his section, was elected justice of the peace, and transacted all the law business for his neighborhood for many years. He was a man of untiring industry, of a deeply religious nature and punctilious in the discharge of all his duties as a citizen, a neighbor and church member. He was a deacon of the Congregational church and in later life an elder of the Presbyterian church. His mill interests led him into litigation and he was the victim of misunderstandings and pecuniary loss. In his diary under date of April 2, 1844, he writes: "Two years ago my wife died. This world seems like a blank, a trifle not worth living for. My energies of both body and mind are somewhat enfeebled by age. My property had fled; my reputation and char- acter slandered; my influence proportionately diminished. Ere another year passes, should I be laid beside my beloved wife, I should not in the least re- gret it, but I will wait with patience until God shall call". He was at this time about fifty-seven. He lived nearly eighteen years thereafter an active, useful life. In the later years of his life he was a member of his son Newton's family and removed with him to Pembroke, New York, in 1849, where he died.
Calvin Wells married, in Greenfield, Massachusetts, October 25, 1808, Bet- sey Taggart, sixth of the seventeen children of Rev. Samuel Taggart, of Cole- rain, Massachusetts. She was a true helpmate and companion and was re- markable in many respects; she inherited from her father a wonderful mem- ory, strong mental powers and that religious bias, so strong in those raised un- der New England clericalism of that period. Her home was known as the "Minister's home" for miles around. She was foremost in good works and ex- ercised a helpful and healthy influence upon her children that has found ex- pression in their lives. She died in Byron, April 2, 1842, and her death cast a profound and lasting shadow over her husband's life. The children of Cal- vin and Betsey (Taggart) Wells were: I. Samuel Taggart, born in Greenfield, Massachusetts, August 6, 1809, died May 29, 1896. He chose the ministry as his profession and Presbyterianism as his creed. He graduated from Prince- ton Theological Seminary in 1842, and was licensed to preach by the Second Presbytery of New York, April 27, 1842. In 1881 he was honorably retired from the ministry and for several years lived on his farm at Saticoy, Califor- nia, but in 1887 he made his home in Ventura, California, where he died aged nearly eighty-seven years. During his forty years of ministerial work he oc- cupied many positions of honor and many different pulpits, and engaged in many different fields of christian endeavor. His first wife was Catherine Mc- Pherson, of Schenectady, New York. She was born January 31, 1808, died in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, April 22, 1853. His second wife was Eliza Swan, of Burlington, Iowa. She was born in Chillicothe, Ohio, March 6, 1821, died in Ventura, California, February 1I, 1899. She had no children. The chil- dren of the first wife are: Rosanna McPherson, Moses Taggart, Elizabeth Jane and Samuel Calvin. 2. Daniel Newton, born in Greenfield, Massachu- setts, March 14, 1811, died in Virginia, March 28, 1886. He was by occupation a farmer. His youth and early manhood were passed in Western New York where his parents removed in 1815. In 1862 he removed to Buffalo Grove,
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Iowa, and in 1870, to Loudoun county, Virginia, where he died. He married, at Byron, New York, January 29, 1834, Elizabeth Rachel Taggart, born in Preble, New York, April 14, 1815. He lived to celebrate his golden wedding, January 29, 1884. The children of Daniel and Elizabeth (Taggart) Wells were: Frances Eliza, Franklin Hubert, Daniel Newton Jr., Charlotte Elizabeth, Gil- bert Crawford, Charles Alfred and Frances Esther. 3. Elizabeth Duncan, born in Byron, New York, April 20, 1816, died on Sugar Island in the Sault Ste. Marie river, October 23, 1876. She married, in Byron, New York, Phile- tus Swift Church, born in Riga, Monroe county, New York, August 20, 1812, died July 2, 1883. He was for many years a merchant and lumberman among the Indians of northern Michigan. Their home was on Sugar Island. Their children are: Jesse Wells, Munson Taggart and Philetus Munson Church. 4. Calvin.
Parson Taggart, as he was generally called, father of Betsey (Taggart) Wells, was of Scotch-Irish stock, born in Londonderry, New Hampshire, March 24, 1754, died April 25, 1825. He graduated from Dartmouth College in 1774, and was ordained a minister of the Presbyterian church. In 1777 he became pastor of the church in Colerain, Massachusetts, and filled that position until 1818. In 1802 he was about to remove to New York when he was nomi- nated and afterward elected to Congress. He served in that body from Massa- chusetts continuously and acceptably for seven terms-fourteen years. He was a Federalist, of strong character and rather eccentric disposition. He published a number of religious and political pamphlets and at least one volume which still survives entitled: "A View of the Evidences of Christianity and of the Inspirations of the Scriptures", printed in 1811. He married (first), Elizabeth Duncan, a typical Scotch woman of many rare qualities. She bore him fourteen children. Married (second) Mary Ayres, of Dover, Delaware. She bore him three children.
CALVIN WELLS, son of Calvin and Betsey (Taggart) Wells, was born in Byron, Genesee county, New York, December 26, 1827, died August 2, 1909. He was educated in the public schools of his native town, and spent one and one-half years at Western University of Pennsylvania. In 1843 he entered the store of his brother-in-law, P. S. Church, at Detroit, Michigan, where he passed two and one-half years. Feeling the need of further education, he came to Pittsburgh, where he spent the time mentioned above at the University, living with his brother, Rev. Samuel Taggart Wells, a Presbyterian divine of the city who had encouraged him to take the. college course. In 1847 he left the University, and for the next two years was a clerk in the dry goods store of Benjamin Glyde in Pittsburgh. He then became associated with Dr. Curtis G. Hussey, and for twenty-six years these two men were close business associates. Dr. Hussey had established a copper manufacturing plant and Mr. Wells be- came virtually the manager. In 1854 the provision business was established, the firm being Hussey & Wells. In 1859 this firm was merged in the Crucible Steel Manufacturing business of Hussey, Wells & Company. This company was the first in the country wholly devoted to the making of higher grades of Cru- cible Steel. Mr. Wells was manager and to his constant energy, study and in- vention, their success was due. The firm prospered, enlarged and met the ex- tra demands made upon their resources until 1876, when Mr. Wells sold his in-
Calin Spells
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terest and severed his twenty-six year connection with Dr. Hussey. Previous. to this, in 1868, he had become convinced of the possibilities in zinc and spel- ter, and organized the Illinois Zinc Company, with works at Peru, La Salle county, Illinois. This is now one of the two very largest plants in the United States devoted to the manufacture of that class of metals. Mr. Wells was president and treasurer. Previous to this he had been half-owner in A. French & Company, manufacturers of Railway Elliptic and Locomotive Springs. This he retained until 1884 when he sold his interest. In 1878 Mr. Wells became president and treasurer of the Pittsburgh Forge and Iron Company, a connec- tion long maintained. In 1877 he became one of the principal owners of the Philadelphia Press and owning a controlling interest. In 1880 he secured Charles Emory Smith as editor and with him planned and carried through a thorough reorganization of the entire plant, introduced the most perfect news- paper equipment obtainable and made the Press one of the great newspapers of the country, as it now is. While always loyal to the Republican party, Mr. Wells had persistently declined public office. In 1899 he received on several days fifty unsolicited votes for United States senator in opposition to Matthew S. Quay, and in 1884 was chosen elector-at-large on the State Republican tick- et. His church connection was with the Third Presbyterian of Pittsburgh, where he was a most useful member for half a century. He was president of the Board of Trustees and was especially helpful when the society removed and built their handsome new church. He was director and vice-president of the Exchange Bank of Pittsburgh, trustee of Western University of Pennsylvania (now Pittsburgh University), until 1907 was one of the managers of the de- partment of archaeology of the University of Pennsylvania in charge of the Egyptian and Mediterranean section, president of the American Exploration Society, and has rendered much valuable public service not mentioned. These later day intellectual activities were characteristic of Mr. Wells' peculiar tem- perament. Although so much of his life was spent in the midst of practical business problems, he at once adapted himself to these new studies and pursuits for which his wide reading, practical knowledge and careful following of arch- aeological discoveries unconsciously prepared him. Indeed he was consid- ered so highly in these matters, that on the death of Dr. William Pepper, Mr. Wells was elected to succeed him as president of the American Exploration So- ciety.
Calvin Wells married (first) July 5, 1854, at Allegheny City, Pennsylvania, Annie Glyde, born in Yeovil, England, January 20, 1835, died in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, March 13, 1859, daughter of Benjamin and Annie (Chaffey) Glyde, who were married in Thorncombe, Devonshire, England, October 12, 1831. He was a glove manufacturer of Yeovil, England. In 1841 he removed to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, where he engaged in business as a merchant for many years, dying September 15, 1862. Calvin Wells married (second) Mary Chaffey Glyde, born in Yeovil, England, March 8, 1836, died in Allegheny City, Pennsylvania, May 31, 1904. She was a sister of his first wife. The only child of Calvin and Annie Glyde Wells is Annie Glyde, born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, May 6, 1855. She was educated in the private schools in Pitts- burgh, and in Pelham Priory and at Vassar College. She married, April 26, 1881, Robert Johnson Cook, born in Fayette county, Pennsylvania, in 1848, a
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graduate of Yale, and at the time of his marriage a member of the Pittsburgh bar. They lived for a year in Leipsic, Germany. Afterward, for twelve years, in or near Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Mr. Cook for most of this period being business manager of the Philadelphia Press. She was divorced from. R. J. Cook and married Samuel LeNord Caldweld, of Colorado Springs, Colorado, October 10, 1910. Children of Mr. and Mrs. Cook: i. Elsa, born in Leipsic, Germany, February 17, 1882, married Charles Edward Greenfield, and has a son, Charles E. Greenfield, Jr. ii. Helen Chaffey, born in Philadelphia, Jan- uary I, 1885, married Daniel Stephenson, of Sharon, Pennsylvania. iii. Dorothy Glyde, born in Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania, July 20, 1890, married Harry Grant in London, England, August, 1910.
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