USA > Pennsylvania > Colonial and revolutionary families of Pennsylvania; genealogical and personal memoirs, Vol. III > Part 16
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28, 1849. In 1832 he applied for and received a pension of $80 per annum, commencing March 4, 1831, by reason of his service in the army in the Revo- lution. An obituary notice of Stephen Kinney published in an Ohio paper at the time of his death is in part as follows :
"ANOTHER REVOLUTIONARY HERO GONE."
"Stephen Kinney, formerly of Stonington, Connecticut, was born March 6, 1762, and died July 19, 1848, in the 87th year of his age, at the residence of his son John Coates Kinney, Mount Holly, Ohio.
"When but a youth he was inspired with the love of political and religious liberty, and the whole course of his long and eventful life fully proved how devotedly and patriotically he was enamored of, and attached to those high and exalted principles and rights, which his powerful honest mind embraced in his younger days.
"In the Revolutionary struggle of his country he enlisted under the American flag and Whig banner for their defence, and nobly did he sustain the character of a patriotic Christian soldier and in the subsequent history of his life left full proof of the purity of his patriotic motives in their defence.
"His whole life has been proverbial for industry, frugality and strict honesty of purpose. He was free, frank and courteous and always submissive to the Providence of God; was a firm consistent believer in the final redemption and holiness of all the children of men from death and corruption. This faith he embraced soon after the Revolutionary War, under the preaching of Rev. John Murray, and soon became a public advocate of his sentiments. He continued steadfast and immovable up to the last, and closed his eyes to his earthly career in the triumph of his faith over death and the grave. J. F."
JOHN COATES KINNEY, fourth child of Stephen and Rebecca (Coates) Kin- ney, born in Preston, Connecticut, January 21, 1796, removed with his father to Warren county, Ohio, in 1815, and was later associated in business with him there. He died in Mount Holly, Warren county, Ohio, July, 1849. He mar- ried (first) Betsy Palmer, and (second), December 10, 1834, Mrs. Mary (O'Neal) Kelley, who was born September, 1802, in Newberry, Maryland, and died in Dayton, Ohio, June, 1878.
JOHN PALMER KINNEY, son of John Coates and Mary (O'Neal) (Kelley) Kinney, born in Springboro, Warren county, Ohio, April 25, 1838, was a gallant soldier in the War of the Rebellion. He enlisted in the Forty-third Regiment, Ohio Volunteers, and was commissioned second lieutenant, October 1, 1861, and after three years arduous service was mustered out with the rank of cap- tain, at Chattanooga, Tennessee, October 28, 1864.
Captain John Palmer Kinney married, at Circleville, Ohio, November 23, 1859, Emma Virginia Delaplaine, born April 4, 1841, in Hillsboro, Ohio, daugh- ter of Samuel and Margaret (Miller) Delaplaine, and a descendant of Nicholas and Susanna (Cresson) Delaplaine, French Huguenots, who migrated to Long Island about 1660, from whence his son James migrated to Philadelphia. Cap- tain Kinney removed with his family to Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, in 1865, where they resided for many years. He died in Steelton, Pennsylvania, Feb- ruary 1, 1899.
Captain John P. and Emma V. (Delaplaine) Kinney had six children : Charles Clinton, the subject of this sketch; Frank Delaplaine, also of Philadel- phia, who married, October 17, 1900, Annie Miller, of York, Pennsylvania ; Leonora, married, July 14, 1892, Charles Simpson Davis, of Steelton, where they reside ; Mary, married, October 18, 1894, Abram Allen Brehm, of Steel- ton, Pennsylvania, and they now reside in Pittsburgh; Margaret, married, Oc- tober 17, 1895, George Washington Douglass, of Steelton, Pennsylvania, they
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also now live in Pittsburgh; John Elmore, married, August 20, 1903, Harriet Florence Doffler, of York, Pennsylvania, and now resides in Philadelphia.
CHARLES CLINTON KINNEY, eldest son of Captain John Palmer and Emma V. (Delaplaine) Kinney, born in Circleville, Ohio, November 8, 1860, was but five years of age when his parents removed to Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, where he attended the public schools until the age of fourteen years. His father fail- ing in business he started out to earn his livelihood at that age, and found em- ployment in the insurance office of John F. Eaton, and later in the bookstore of George Bergner. He enlisted as a drummer boy in Company D, Eighth Regi- ment National Guard of Pennsylvania, of Harrisburg, called the "City Grays". and served in that organization during the strike riots of 1877, in Western Penn- sylvania, his regiment being one of those called out, after the exciting encount- er with the strikers at the round house in Pittsburgh.
In January, 1878, Mr. Kinney entered the office of the Harrisburg Telegraph, as an apprentice to the printing trade, and served four years, graduating with high commendation of his employers, January 21, 1882. On the same date he was appointed assistant in the freight department of the Pennsylvania Rail- road at Lancaster, and passing through all the grades of the department to chief clerk remained there until May 1, 1884, when he was transferred to the position of chief clerk in the Kensington district of same railroad in Philadel- phia, which he filled for eight years. On July 6, 1892, he was transferred to the position of assistant superintendent at Mantua Transfer, West Philadel- phia, one of the largest and most important transfer stations on the line of that great railroad system. January 6, 1902, he was appointed assistant agent in charge of the Washington Avenue Wharf District, which position he still re- tains, having under his jurisdiction all the company's freight interests along the Delaware river between South Street and Greenwich, and which embraces all the foreign and coastwise steamship traffic.
For many years he was assistant editor of the Pennsylvania Railroad Men's News; has been for sixteen years the active chairman of the Entertainment Committee of the Pennsylvania Railroad Department of the Young Men's Chris- tian Association, and was also manager of its base ball team for several sea- sons. Besides being a member of the board of management of that Association, he is also a member of the Pennsylvania Railroad Veteran's Association of Railroad Men. Mr. Kinney is a member of the Pennsylvania Society Sons of the Revolution, in right of his great-great-grandfather, Stephen Kinney; is a member of the Ohio Society of Philadelphia, the Historical Society of Pennsyl- vania, and of the City and Traffic clubs of Philadelphia.
He married, at Lancaster, Pennsylvania, December 20, 1893, Annie M., daugh- ter of Blasius and Mary (Shreck) Yecker, of Lancaster, Pennsylvania.
TABER ASHTON
THOMAS ASHTON, the earliest ancestor of Taber Ashton of whom we have any definite record, settled in Lower Makefield township, Bucks county, Penn- sylvania, where a tract of two hundred and thirty-three acres of land lying back of the river plantations, along the line of Newtown township, was sur- veyed to him, October 20, 1705, by virtue of a warrant dated May 21, 1703. He married (first) at Falls Monthly Meeting of Friends, Bucks county, Penn- sylvania, August 31, 1701, Deborah Baines, supposed to be the daughter of Matthew and Margaret (Hatton) Baines, of Weyersdale, Lancashire, England, born March 1, 1683, though she did not accompany her parents on their ill- fated voyage to Pennsylvania, in 1687, when both parents died on the voyage, but probably joined her brother and sister in Pennsylvania later.
Thomas Ashton married (second) Hannah - -, who survived him, and to whom a patent was issued, as his widow, August 16, 1734, for one hundred and thirty-three acres of the land surveyed to her husband thirty years earlier, he having transferred his right to one hundred acres thereof during his lifetime, though never having taken out his patent.
Thomas Ashton was possibly a son of James Ashton, an early settler in New Jersey, who died intestate at about the date of Thomas's appearance in Bucks county, but nothing definite is known of his antecedents or the place of his nativity further than that he was of English parentage, and probable nativity.
ISAAC ASHTON, son of Thomas and Deborah (Baines) Ashton, born in Bucks county about 1702, died there in 1754, intestate. He married, by New Jersey license, dated November 30, 1736, Dorothy Carr, of Bucks county, who after his death married Joseph Ballance, of Wrightstown township, Bucks county, and survived him many years. The children of Isaac and Dorothy (Carr) Ash- ton, according to the records of the Orphans' Court of Bucks County, where guardians were appointed for them in August, 1756, were, "Mary Ashton, 18 years old, John Ashton, nearly 17, Hannah 15, Thomas, above 14, Elizabeth 12, Ann 10, and Lydia 8."
JOHN ASHTON, eldest son and second child of Isaac and Dorothy (Carr) Ashton, was born in Bucks county, in 1739, died in 1800. He married, by New Jersey license, dated February 13, 1765, Mary Fenton, of Burlington, New Jer- sey, born 1742, died 1818. She was one of the daughters of Samuel Fenton, of Chesterfield township, Burlington county, whose will dated January 9, 1762, was proved September 28, 1767; and granddaughter of Eleazer Fenton, one of the early settlers of New Jersey, and one of the proprietors of West Jersey, who died in 1704, by his second wife, Elizabeth Stacy, of a prominent and ti- tled family of Yorkshire, England. Eleazer Fenton was a large landowner in Burlington county, and was prominent in public affairs as were his descend- ants for several generations. His first wife was a West, by whom he had one son, Ephraim, the founder of the Fenton family in Bucks county. He mar- ried (second), by license dated February 2, 1690, Elizabeth Stacy, who sur-
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vived him and married (second) Samuel Gooldey. The family were nominally Friends, but so many of them married outside of the Society that there was no continuity of membership in the Society. Samuel Fenton was also a large landowner. He left three sons, Thomas, Samuel and Stacy, and three daugh- ters, Sarah, Mary and Elizabeth. Mary (Fenton) Ashton died at Crosswicks, New Jersey, in 1808.
John and Mary (Fenton) Ashton, had three sons, John, of whom presently, Isaac, who died in 1818, leaving children, Samuel Fenton Ashton, Thomas Ashton, an eminent artist of London, England, Isaac M. Ashton, and Mary and Elizabeth, successively the wives of John D. Moore, of Burlington; and Samuel Ashton, born March 5, 1773, died in Philadelphia, in 1837, who mar- ried Catharine Louisa Reynolds, and had issue, Isaac S., John R., Samuel R., Augustus D., Albert B., Alfred R. and Adolphus H. Ashton.
JOHN ASHTON, son of John and Mary (Fenton) Ashton, married, in 1794, Rebecca Scull, who it is claimed by her descendants, was a descendant of Nicho- las Scull, the surveyor-general of Pennsylvania, who was the eldest of six sons of Nicholas Scull, who emigrated to America from county Cork, Ireland, from the port of Bristol, England, in the ship "Bristol," Merchant, landing at Ches- ter, September 10, 1685. The first progenitor of the family in England was a Norman, Sir John Scull, who was one of the Twelve Knights mentioned in Bernard Burke's landed gentry. Nicholas Scull was born near Philadelphia, 1687, and married Abigail Heap, 1708.
John and Rebecca (Scull) Ashton had twelve children: Isaac, Mary, Re- becca, John, Ann, Sarah, Samuel, of whom presently, Henrietta, Joseph S., Charles, Caroline and Phebe.
SAMUEL ASHTON, seventh child and third son of John and Rebecca (Scull ) Ashton, was born August 8, 1812, died March, 1899, in Philadelphia. He mar- ried Adaline, born April 3, 1813, died October, 1882, daughter of Laban Ca- pron, of Harford township, Susquehanna county, Pennsylvania, and his wife, Asenath (Fuller) Capron, granddaughter of Dr. Comfort Capron, of Attleboro, Massachusetts, and his wife, Martha (Metcalf) Capron, great-granddaughter of Jonathan Capron, and his wife, Rebecca (Morse) Capron, and great-great- granddaughter of Banfield Capron, of the same place, a native of one of the northern counties of England, born in the year 1660, at the age of fourteen years, with three other youths of about the same age, ran away from home with the avowed intention of making their way to America to seek their for- tunes. Secreting themselves on board a ship bound for New England until it was far out at sea, they were able to accomplish their purpose, and were in due time landed on the shore of New England. Banfield Capron located in Bristol county, Massachusetts, and about 1681 married a Miss Callender, of Rehoboth, Massachusetts, and took up his residence in the little town of Bar- rington, near Rehoboth, where he resided for twenty years, owning and oper- ating a farm. Attracted by the cheapness of the land in the less thickly set- tled portion of the county he sold his farm at Barrington and removed with his family "back in the woods" at what is now the thriving manufacturing town of Attleboro, the northeastern part of Bristol county, Massachusetts, where he lived until his death which occurred on August 20, 1752, at the age of ninety-two years. Banfield Capron's first wife died in 1733, at the age of
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seventy years, after a married life of fifty-two years. He married (second) Elizabeth Blackington, of Attleboro, who survived the marriage but a short time, dying May 10, 1735. He married a third time, December 16, 1735, Sarah Daggett, the widow of Deacon John Daggett, of Attleboro, who survived him. Banfield and - (Callender) Capron had twelve children the eldest of whom, Banfield Jr., was born in 1682. The other sons were Joseph, Edward, Walter, John and Jonathan. The daughters intermarried into the Aldrich, Free- man, Brown, Arnold, Tyler and other prominent New England families. Jon- athan Capron, one of the younger sons of Banfield Capron, was born March II, 1705, and was a farmer at Attleboro, Bristol county, Massachusetts, re- maining with his father on the homestead. He married Rebecca Morse, who died August 29, 1772, in her sixty-sixth year. They had eight children, viz : Benjamin, Jonathan, Elisha, Comfort, Elizabeth, Margaret, Hannah and Re- becca. Dr. Comfort Capron, son of Jonathan and Rebecca (Morse) Capron, was born at Attleboro, Bristol county, Massachusetts, March 18, 1743. He studied medicine and was a practicing physician at Attleboro. He served as a surgeon of Massachusetts troops during the Revolution. He married, March 27, 1765, Martha Metcalf, and had five children, viz : Welcome, Laban, Polly, (who became the wife of David Aldrich, her cousin, a grandson of Banfield Capron), Dordana, and Orion, who married Amy Carpenter and removed to Ohio. Laban Capron, father of Adaline (Capron) Ashton, was the second son of Dr. Comfort and Martha (Metcalf) Capron, and was born at Attle- boro, Massachusetts, January 19, 1768. He married Asenath Fuller, and set- tled in Harford, Susquehanna county, Pennsylvania, where he died. The Fuller family, long resident near Rehoboth, Bristol county, Massachusetts, were descendants of Edward Fuller, a passenger on the "Mayflower."
TABER ASHTON, son of Samuel and Adaline (Capron) Ashton, was born in Philadelphia, June 6, 1846, and was educated at private and public schools of the city, finishing his elementary education at the Philadelphia high school. He entered Tufts College in 1867, and graduated in 1869, with the degree of Bache- lor of Philosophy. He entered the service of the Pennsylvania Railroad in September, 1864, and continued with them until the present time, serving as treasurer and in other official positions in several of the subsidiary companies of the Pennsylvania system. Mr. Ashton is a member of the Historical So- ciety of Pennsylvania; of the Academy of Fine Arts; American Academy of Political and Social Science; the Civil Service Reform Association, etc., and of the Pennsylvania Society, Sons of the Revolution, in right of descent from Sur- geon Comfort Capron, of the Revolution.
Taber Ashton married, June 3, 1886, Margaret Shotwell, daughter of Wal- ter and Anna (Lukens) Laing, of Bristol, Bucks county, and a descendant of prominent New Jersey families of the Colonial period. They had issue: Leon- ard Capron Ashton, Dorothy Ashton, Herbert Ashton, George Taber Ashton, Margaret Ashton, died in July, 1893, and Randolph Ashton. Mr. Ashton re- sides at Swarthmore, Pennsylvania.
HON. JAMES TYNDALE MITCHELL
HON. JAMES TYNDALE MITCHELL, retiring Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, was born in the city of Belleville, St. Clair county, Illinois, to which section his family had migrated from Western Virginia about 1823. His earlier ancestors, however, had originally settled on the shores of the Chesapeake, in eastern Virginia.
EDWARD MITCHELL, the earliest paternal ancestor of Judge Mitchell of whom we have any distinct record, was born in Charleston, South Carolina, in 1700. He had three sons, James, Edward and Francis. James, the oldest, was born in Charleston, March 27, 1727, but moved early to Hanover county, Virginia, and there married Molly, widow of Major William Berry, daughter of Col- onel Samuel and Prudence (Thornton) Pryor, and granddaughter of Robert Pryor. Robert Pryor, the grandfather, a native of England, had received a grant of three hundred and nine acres of land, April 21, 1689, at the head of Craney creek, Ware parish, Gloucester county, Virginia. Numerous descend- ants of the name were later residents of Gloucester, Caroline, Hanover and Spottsylvania counties. Colonel Samuel Pryor, son of Robert Pryor, the emi- grant, married Prudence Thornton, born in Gloucester county, Virginia, March 31, 1699, daughter of William Thornton, of an English family early settled in Gloucester county. They had eight sons and two daughters, Nancy and Molly. Nancy married George Taylor. Molly Pryor, born November 30, 1730, mar- ried (first) Major William Berry, of Gloucester county, by whom she had two daughters, Nancy and Prudence, both of whom married and removed with their husbands to Kentucky, Prudence being the wife of Major George Black- burn, and ancestress of a family since prominent in the affairs of Kentucky. Molly (Pryor) Berry married (second) James Mitchell, by whom she had three sons: Captain Edward, of whom presently ; James (1762-81) ; and Sam- uel, (1764-1855). She died in March, 1804. Her husband died in 1819.
CAPTAIN EDWARD MITCHELL, son of James and Molly (Pryor-Berry) Mit- chell, was born in Hanover county, Virginia, August 3, 1760. He married Nancy Haley, of Cecil county, Maryland. He was appointed captain in and quartermaster of Colonel William Campbell's Virginia Rifle Regiment, and served with that regiment in the campaign of 1780-81, from Guildford Court House to Jamestown Ford, inclusive.
Captain Edward Mitchell was one of those who shared the opinion of Wash- ington, Jefferson, Madison, George Mason, John Randolph, Henry Lee, and other prominent Virginians in the period following the Revolution, that slav- ery should be abolished in the Old Dominion, and worked zealously in the cause of abolition until all hope of its accomplishment had to be abandoned. When the policy of the State became settled in favor of slavery Captain Mit- chell removed with his family to Illinois, in 1818. He died in Belleville, St. Clair county, in that state, December 3, 1837.
JAMES MITCHELL, son of Captain Edward and Nancy (Haley) Mitchell, born
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in Virginia, November II, 1785, removed with his father to Belleville, Illinois, and died there February 24, 1869. He married Ann George Walton, and they were the grandparents of the subject of this sketch.
EDWARD PHILLIPS MITCHELL, father of Judge Mitchell, was born in Illinois, December 8, 1812, died in Philadelphia, February 24, 1880. His wife was Elizabeth Tyndale.
JAMES TYNDALE MITCHELL, son of Edward Phillips Mitchell, was born at Belleville, Illinois, November 9, 1834. At the age of seven years he was sent to Philadelphia to be educated under the care of his maternal grandmother. He entered the school of Dr. Samuel Jones, and later the Central high school, from which he was graduated at the head of his class in 1852. In the same year he entered Harvard University, from which he graduated with high rank in 1855. He studied law in the office of George W. Biddle, Esq., Philadelphia, and attended lectures at the Law Department of the University of Pennsylvania, and was admitted to the Philadelphia bar, November 10, 1857. In 1859 he was made assistant city solicitor, under the late Charles E. Lex, and filled that position until 1862, when he resumed the general practice of his profession. He was from 1862 to 1888 editor of the American Law Register. He acquired con- siderable eminence in his profession, acting as counsel in many important cases, notably the famous contested election cases of 1868. In 1871 he was elected judge of the District Court of Philadelphia, and after the reorganization of the courts, in 1875, under the new State Constitution, he was transferred to the Court of Common Pleas, No. 2, and was unanimously re-elected to the same position at the expiration of his term in 1881. In 1885 Judge Mitchell was appointed by Governor Robert E. Pattison as one of the three commissioners to ascertain and report what acts of Colonial and State Assembly had not been printed, and on their report in 1886, an act was framed and passed in 1887, au- thorizing their publication, and Judge Mitchell was named as one of the com- missioners to compile them, under the title of Statutes at Large, and they have now reached thirteen volumes. In 1888 Judge Mitchell was nominated and elected to the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, taking his seat in January, 1889, and retiring on the completion of his term of twenty-one years, January, 1910, seven years of which he served as chief justice. Besides being a jurist of great distinction Judge Mitchell is the author of a number of books on legal and historical subjects, among them, "Mitchell on Motions and Rules", "Fidel- ity to Court and Client", "Hints on Practice in Appeals", "History of the. District Court", etc. He is also the author of a number of addresses and inis- cellaneous contributions to legal periodicals. He received the honorary degree of LL.D. from Jefferson Medical College in 1872, and from Harvard Univer- sity in 1901, and from the University of Pennsylvania in 1904. He has been for many years president of the council of the Historical Society of Pennsyl- vania, and an overseer of Harvard University. He is a member of the Amer- ican Philosophical Society, of the Military Order of the Loyal Legion, Pennsyl- vania Society Sons of the Revolution, honorary member of the Society of the Cincinnati, and a member of the Rittenhouse, University and other clubs.
STANLEY GRISWOLD FLAGG, JR.
The founder of the Flagg family in America was Thomas Flagg, who settled in Watertown, Massachusetts, in 1635. From there the family migrated to Connecticut, and finally to Vermont.
SAMUEL FLAGG, the great-great-grandfather of Stanley G. Flagg, Jr., died at Hartford, Connecticut, in 1757, leaving a widow Sarah, a family of four sons and five daughters, and a considerable estate. His will provides for the special education of his son Samuel.
DR. SAMUEL FLAGG, son of Samuel and Sarah Flagg, of Hartford, Connecti- cut, married Mary Wyles, and had a son, Samuel Griswold.
SAMUEL GRISWOLD FLAGG, son of Dr. Samuel and Mary (Wyles) Flagg, mar- ried Harriet, daughter of Philip Maxwell, of Guilford, Vermont, by his wife Abigail Rice, daughter of Captain Phineas Rice, who was born at Worcester, Massachusetts, November 7, 1728, and removed to Vermont prior to the Rev- olutionary War, settling at Guilford, Windham county. He was active in the patriotic movements leading up to the Revolutionary War, serving as a mem- ber of the Committee of Safety and assisting in organizing the first armed force for the defenec of American liberties in his section, known as minutemen. On October 17, 1775, he was commissioned ensign of the company of Captain Hugh Rea, in the First Regiment of Vermont minutemen, under Colonel John Van Ness. On January 4, 1776, he was commissioned by the Committee of Safety and officer of Captain Stephen Shepardson's company, later commanded by Asa Rea, and rendered considerable active service in the patriot cause. He died in Guilford, Windham county, Vermont, in 1819. His wife was Lament Gilbert, of an early New England family.
STANLEY GRISWOLD FLAGG, son of Samuel Griswold and Harriet (Maxwell) Flagg, married Adelaide Gordon, and they were the parents of Stanley Gris- wold Flagg, Jr.,
STANLEY GRISWOLD FLAGG, JR., son of Stanley Griswold and Adelaide (Gor- don) Flagg, was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, January 21, 1860. He received his early education in the public and private schools of Philadelphia, graduated from the Central high school in 1878 with the degree of Bachelor of Arts. In the same year in he engaged in the iron manufacturing business, with the firm of Stanley G. Flagg & Company, established by his father, and is still an active member of that firm. He is a member of the Society of Colonial Wars, of the Pennsylvania Society Sons of the Revolution, of the Historical Society of Pennsylvania, the Historical and Genealogical Society of Boston, Massachusetts, and of the Union League, Rittenhouse and Art Clubs, of Phil- adelphia, and other prominent social, benevolent and patriotic organizations.
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