USA > Pennsylvania > Colonial and revolutionary families of Pennsylvania; genealogical and personal memoirs, Volume II > Part 25
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He had the confidence and esteem of the leading citizens of all professions, industries and institutions of the city. In religion he was a Presbyterian, and had been a member of the Shady Side Presbyterian Church for forty years, and was at one time a trustee. In politics he was a staunch Republican. Major Laughlin was most liberal in his charities and benefactions, and both during his life and after his death, charitable organizations and hospitals, as well as the worthy poor, benefited greatly by his quiet and unostentatious gener- osity. His old alma mater, Washington and Jefferson College, which he left as a young man to go to the front as a soldier, especially benefited by his liberality, for he willed to this institution a fund without designation, which, however, the college authorities after his death saw fit to employ as an endowment fund for two professorships to bear his name and that of his wife. In recog- nition of his patriotic services and business ability, no less than for his scholar-
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ship and personal character, the trustees of Washington and Jefferson College conferred on him the degree of master of arts.
Major Laughlin was a member of the Duquesne, Pittsburgh and Union Clubs, and of the Pittsburgh Golf Club. He had a membership in the National Arts Club of New York City, and was a member of the Manufacturers' Club of Philadelphia. He was a member of the Grand Army of the Republic, of the Loyal Legion, and of the Sons of the Revolution.
The issue of Major George McCully and Isabel B. (McKennan) Laughlin : I. William McKennan Laughlin, died in childhood. 2. Irwin Boyle Laughlin, born April 16, 1871; he was educated at St. Paul's School, Concord, New Hampshire, and at Yale University, from which he was graduated in the class of 1893. After two years spent in travel he entered the firm of Jones & Laughlin (Limited), finally becoming treasurer of the Jones & Laughlin Steel Company in 1900, an office which he filled until the fall of 1904, when he resigned to become secretary to the Hon. Lloyd C. Griscom, then minister to Japan. A year later he became second secretary of the American legation at Tokio, Japan, and in the following year was transferred to Bangkok, Siam, as consul general, remaining there for about eight months. He was then transferred to the American legation at Pekin, China, in the capacity of second secretary, and a few months later to the American embassy at St. Petersburg, Russia, with the same rank. In September, 1908, he was appointed secretary and chargé d'affaires of the American legation at Athens, Greece. Mr. Laughlin is a member of the Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh Golf and Allegheny Country Clubs of his native city and of the University Club of New York. 3. George M. Laughlin, Jr., was born February 25, 1873. He was educated at St. Paul's School, Concord, New Hampshire, and at Sheffield Scientific School of Yale University. After leaving that institution he entered the firm of Jones & Laughlin (Limited), and is now manager of the Soho mill of the Jones & Laughlin Steel Company. Mr. Laughlin is a member of the Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh Golf and Allegheny Country Clubs of Pittsburgh, and of the St. Anthony Club of New York. He married Henrietta Speer and has issue: George M. Laughlin (3); Catherine Speer Laughlin; Isabel McKennan Laughlin; John Speer Laughlin. 4. Thomas K. Laughlin, fourth son of Major George McCully Laughlin, was born March 16, 1875. He was educated at St. Paul's School, Concord, New Hampshire, and at Sheffield Scientific School, Yale University, from which he graduated in the class of 1897. Immediately thereafter he entered the firm of Jones & Laughlin (Limited), and is now a director and assistant treasurer of the Jones & Laughlin Steel Company, and a director of the Keystone National Bank of Pittsburgh. He is a member of the Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh Golf and Allegheny Country Clubs of Pittsburgh and of the St. An- thony Club of New York, and of the Military Order of the Loyal Legion.
Thomas K. Laughlin married, January 3, 1903, Lucy H. Herron, daughter of Hon. John W. Herron, of Cincinnati, and has issue: William K. Laughlin, born August 31, 1904, and Thomas Irwin Laughlin, born February 5, 1906. 5. The only daughter of Major George McCully Laughlin was Paulin Gertrude Laughlin, who died at the age of eight years.
James Laughlin, Jr., youngest son of James and Ann (Irwin) Laughlin, was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, June 18, 1847. His early education was
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obtained in the private schools of Pittsburgh and Oakland, and at the Western University, which he entered in 1859, remaining two years. He then prepared for Princeton under James Newell, of Newell's Institute, entering that university in 1864, and was graduated in 1868. In the fall of that year he commenced his business career with Laughlin & Company at the Eliza Furnaces, being associated with his brother, Henry Alexander Laughlin, in the management of the company as secretary and treasurer. He has since continued to be actively engaged in the business of Laughlin & Company and of Jones & Laughlin, being a director of the Jones & Laughlin Steel Company, into which the two above-named companies have been merged. He is also a director of the First National Bank of Pittsburgh and an alumnus trustee of Princeton University. He is a member of the Society of the Sons of the American Revolution and of the University, Duquesne, Pittsburgh and Alle- gheny Golf Clubs of Pittsburgh, and of the Union League, New York Yacht, Seawanhaka Yacht Clubs of New York, the Corinthian Yacht Club of Philadel- phia, and the Automobile Club of America. James Laughlin, Jr., married Febru- ary 10, 1870, Sidney, daughter of John Harding Page and Sidney (Ormsby) Page, of Pittsburgh. Issue of James, Jr. and Sidney (Page) Laughlin: I. Martha Page Laughlin, married, 1904, Edgar R. Seeler, of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. 2. Leila Irwin Laughlin. 3. John Page Laughlin. 4. Henry Hughart Laughlin. 5. James Laughlin.
Benjamin Page, grandfather of Sidney Page Laughlin (Mrs. James Laughlin Jr.), was a distinguished United States naval officer born in Bunhill Row, London, England, December 6, 1792. He was a son of Benjamin Page by his first wife, Elizabeth Rankin. His parents removed from London to New York City in 1797, where his father became a prominent shipping merchant and one of the first importers of English goods after the Revolution. Later he was one of the founders of the first successful flint-glass works in the United States, begun at Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, in 1808. Captain Page was appointed a midshipman in the United States Navy from New York on March 26, 1800, when in his eighth year. He resigned July 7, 1803, and was reap- pointed December 17, 1810, promoted to lieutenant, April 27, 1816, commissioned master commandant, March 15, 1836, to date from December 22, 1835; pro- moted captain, September 21, 1841, to date from September 8, 1841, and was placed on the reserved list, September 13, 1855. In 1832, when commanding the United States schooner "Boxer", Captain (then Lieutenant) Page visited Liberia to suppress piracy on the coast of Africa (for his report in relation to which see American State Papers, p. 179 sq-I vol. iv, Naval Affairs, Wash- ington, 1861). Captain Benjamin Page married Eliza McEvers Livingston, daughter of John R. Livingston, of New York, by his wife Eliza McEvers. Captain Page died in New York, April 17, 1858, and was buried in the John R. Livingston vault in Trinity churchyard.
John Harding Page, eldest child of Benjamin Page and his second wife Martha Harding, was born at 162 Pearl street, New York, November 6, 1804. He was educated under the celebrated Dr. Alexander Campbell at Buffalo Seminary, now called Bethany, West Virginia. This school, to which so many of the best families of Pittsburgh sent their sons, attracted by the reputation of Dr. Campbell's father as a teacher in Pittsburgh, was incorporated as Bethany
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College in 1840. Much of Mr. Page's life was devoted to benevolent work, especially to improvement of the moral and spiritual conditions of prisoners in the jail, where he visited regularly, supplying the sick with needed attentions and comforts. He was for many years prominent as an active and devoted member of Christ Methodist Episcopal Church, then at Pennsylvania avenue and Eighth street, Pittsburgh. Being in comfortable circumstances by inheri- tance from both his father and father-in-law, Mr. Page early retired from active business life to his country seat. "The Jingle" (now in Pittsburgh, South Side), where he died August 29, 1871. He was married, October 25, 1825, by the Rev. John H. Hopkins (rector of Trinity Episcopal Church, Pittsburgh, and afterwards Bishop of Vermont) at her father's country seat, "Homestead Farm", to Sidney Ormsby, daughter of Oliver Ormsby, of Pittsburgh.
The only daughter of James Laughlin and Ann (Irwin) Laughlin was Eliza Irwin Laughlin, who married Major Duncan Clinch Phillips, now of Wash- ington, D. C. They have: James Laughlin Phillips and Duncan Phillips.
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WILLIAM DE WITT KENNEDY
JOHN KENNEDY, who came from Bangor, County Down, Ireland, in 1763, and settled in Kingston, New York, is the first of the family of whom we have absolute knowledge. He was born April 24, 1739. Owing to his being of the Scotch Presbyterian faith and having lived but a few miles from the Kennedys of Cultra, some have thought him related to that ancient family, who were doubtless connected with the Earls of Casselis in Scotland, in which the name John was given to the oldest son for seven or eight generations. Be that as it may, family tradition assures us that John Kennedy, the emigrant, was a man of ability, clear headed and kind hearted. Like the majority of those who came early to this country, he had a trade, being a tailor, an occupation he pursued after coming to America. In Kingston, New York, he married Mrs. Josiah Van Fleet, whose maiden name was Armstrong. There were several children born of her first marriage who settled in Galena, Ohio. The time and place of her death is unknown, but her husband long survived her. He settled in the Wyoming Valley in 1780, and died August 20, 1809, aged seventy years, and was buried in Plains township cemetery, Luzerne county, Pennsyl- vania. To John Kennedy and his wife were born five children, four of whom married into families who were in the Wyoming Valley previous to the massacre, several members of them being in that memorable conflict. Catherine married Cornelius Courtright; Elizabeth married Henry Stark; John married Sallie Abbott; and James married Nancy Armstrong; Thomas, whose line will be continued, married, in 1801, Elizabeth Schofield, born April 15, 1784, in Kingston, New York, a gentle little woman much beloved by her children, grand- children and great-grandchildren. She was descended from the Pinckneys of South Carolina, and in many respects was a remarkable woman. Left a widow at twenty-five years of age with five little children, she managed her affairs in such a manner that they grew to manhood and womanhood, a credit to their mother's training. She died, April 12, 1880, at the home of her son James Schofield, where she had long resided.
The children of Thomas and Elizabeth (Schofield) Kennedy were: John, married Polly Campbell; Sarah, married William H. Sherman; Polly, married Crandall Wilcox; Henry, married Julia Mills; and James Schofield, born January 28, 1808, married, September 26, 1833, Pauline Jayne.
JAMES SCHOFIELD KENNEDY early in life learned the carpenter trade, and was a contractor for several years. He afterward purchased a farm in Lackawanna township, now Taylor, and in connection with his farm did an extensive business in grain and flour, selling to the merchants all along the Valley from Pittston to Carbondale. He was justice of the peace from 1843 to 1845. He sold his farm in Lackawanna just before coal was discovered, and moved to Hyde Park. In 1850 he opened a store in Providence in the old Arcade Building on North Main avenue, long occupied as an office by the Providence Water Company. Later he carried on business on Providence
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Square, being a partner in the firm of Kennedy & Osterhout. In 1854-56 he had a contract to build a section of the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western railroad, then being constructed between New York and Scranton. He was active in public affairs, serving on the borough council and also on the school board. In 1865 he sold out his interest in the store to his son, William De Witt Kennedy, and retired from active business. He died March 7, 1885.
Pauline Jayne, wife of James Schofield Kennedy, the daughter of Samuel and Elsie (Stephens) Jayne, was born December 13, 1815, and died May 16, 1897. The Jaynes were descended from Henry de Jeanne, a professor in Oxford University. His son William, a student in the University, afterward married in England, name of wife not known. In 1652 he was chaplain in Cromwell's army. In 1670, his wife having died and the cause of Cromwell being no longer popular, he emigrated to America, settling in New Haven, Connecticut, leaving three grown sons in England. At that time he took the name of Jayne. In 1675 he married Annie Beigs, and soon after with thirteen or fifteen others crossed over to Long Island, purchased land of the Indians, and settled the town of Brookhaven. The graves of the first settlers are to be found there, and the old farm is still owned by one of the family. William and Annie (Beigs) Jayne were the parents of nine children. Their oldest son, William Jayne (2), married Elizabeth Woodhull, whose oldest son, William Jayne (3), married Tabitha Norton; they were the parents of Rev. David Jayne, born May 14, 1751, died March 9, 1837, who served in the War of the Revolution, and was afterward given a section of "Soldier Land," on Lake Cayuga. The wife of the Rev. David Jayne was Elizabeth DeWitt, born May 3, 1754, died February 15, 1825, whose father, Daniel DeWitt, also served in the Revolution. The son of the Rev. David Jayne was Samuel Jayne, born February 4, 1779, married Elsie Stephens, May 2, 1796, died at Factoryville, Pennsylvania, August 12, 1860.
The grandfather of Elsie (Stephens) Jayne was Eliphalet Stephens. He was a native of Massachusetts, although his military service is credited to New York, from which he enlisted, then his home. After the war he settled in the Wyoming valley, where he was a man of substance and importance. In the court house in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, (book of deeds No. 3, page 46) it is recorded, "James Finn to Eliphalet Stephens (Stevens), land in Pittston township, on the Lackawanna river, and one-half interest in a Saw Mill May 25, 1795; consideration 600 pounds sterling." Other deeds are recorded showing him to have been a large land owner. Eliphalet Stephens was born in Massachusetts, in 1731, and died in Nicholson, Pennsylvania, in August, 1814. Early in life he removed to Connecticut, from thence to Dutchess county, New York; July 31, 1775, in Colonel Clinton's Third Regiment, New York Continental Line, Captain Jacob S. Bruyn's Company. He is described as a man five feet seven inches in height, light hair, fair complexion, age 44, occupation blacksmith. He married, in 1751, Elsie Holloway, who died at Nicholson, Pennsylvania, in April, 1820. Eliphalet had a son, Ebenezer Stephens, born in Goshen, New York, May 12, 1759. He was also in the Revolution, entering at the age of seventeen, and served during the entire seven years. He was a pensioner until his death, in Nicholson, Pennsylvania, November 15, 1839. He married, at Goshen, New York, May 16, 1780, Rachel Squirrel, born at Goshen,
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in 1758, and died at Nicholson, Pennsylvania, August 2, 1848. After the death of her husband, his widow, Rachel (Squirrel) Stephens, received the pension during her life time. They were the parents of Elsie Stephens, who married Samuel Jayne; she was born May 15, 1780, died November 10, 1860.
James and Pauline (Jayne) Kennedy were the parents of thirteen children : Mary L., married James Hicks; Catherine H., married Rev. Lyman C. Floyd; John Jayne, married Mehitable Griffin, he died July 21, 1897; Sarah E., married (first) Isaac H. Heermans, (second) A. B. Crandall; William De Witt, married Amelia M. Carter; James Thomas, married Angeline Carey; Julia A., married Rev. George Forsyth; Charles Henry, died September II, 1806, unmarried; Nancy Elizabeth, died young; Adelaide May, married David F. Shook; Frank E., married Sylvia Davis; Clara Augusta, married George R. Clark, she died October 5, 1895; Helen, married William H. Stevens.
WILLIAM DE WITT KENNEDY, son of James Schofield Kennedy and Pauline (Jayne) Kennedy, was born in Lackawanna township, Luzerne county, Penn- sylvania, September 24, 1842. He was educated in the public schools of Scranton, and Eastman's Business College, Poughkeepsie, New York. Mr. Kennedy is a director of the Scranton Savings Bank and otherwise prominent in the business life of Scranton, Pennsylvania. He is a member and trustee of the Green Ridge Presbyterian Church. He is a member of the Pennsylvania Society of the Sons of the Revolution on the records of Eliphalet and Ebenezer Stephens and Daniel DeWitt. He belongs to the Country Club and the New England Society. He served during the War of the Rebellion in the Thirtieth Pennsylvania Reserves, during the invasion of Pennsylvania by the Southern Army under General Robert E. Lee. During the last year of the war he was quartermaster's clerk in the Fiftieth New York Regiment (Engineer Corps). He is a member of Ezra Griffin Post, No. 139, Grand Army of the Republic.
William De Witt Kennedy married Amelia Maria Carter, daughter of Pulaski Carter, February II, 1868. Through her father, Mrs. Kennedy descends from sterling New England ancestry, notable for patriotism and high public spirit.
The first of the Carter family of authentic record is Thomas Carter, black- smith, and Mary, his wife. They were married in England. Their names appear upon the church records of Charlestown, Massachusetts, in 1636. Their children were Thomas, Joseph, Samuel, John, Mary and Hannah. The will of Thomas Carter recorded in 1652 shows that he was a man of considerable property. His wife, Mary, died in 1664, and her death is recorded as "Mary Carter, mother of the Carters in Town." Joseph Carter, second son of Thomas and Mary Carter, was a currier. His wife was named Susanna He married in 1662, and moved to Woburn, Massachusetts, where he died, December 30, 1676. Joseph (2), son of Joseph (1) and Susanna Carter, lived in Woburn, where he married Bethia Pearson, born September 15, 1645, daughter of John, who came to Lynn in 1637, and left behind at the date of his death, May 29, 1706, three sons and three daughters. John, son of Joseph (2) and Bethia (Pearson) Carter, was born February 26, 1676. He moved to Canterbury, Connecticut, with his wife Mary about 1706. John (2), son of John (1) and Mary Carter, was born in Canterbury, Connecticut, February 24, 1709. He married, April 13, 1731, Deborah, daughter of Ebenezer Bundy, son
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of John, who came to Plymouth in 1643, and they were the parents of nine children. John Carter died August 26, 1776, and Deborah, his wife, died March 9, 1755. Joseph, son of John (2) and Deborah (Bundy) Carter, born July 18, 1736, married, October 3, 1762, Patience Pellet, born June 12, 1739, daughter of Samuel and Margaret Pellet. The parents of Samuel Pellet were Thomas and Mary (Deane) Pellet, who married in Concord, Massachusetts, in 1660. Joseph Carter served in the War of the Revolution as quartermaster in Colonel Gordon's regiment, and died August 15, 1796. Phineas Carter, son of Joseph and Patience (Pellet) Carter, born November 23, 1766, died November 8, 1840, was a landed proprietor of Westminster, Connecticut, a man of strong character, strict integrity, and rigid in exacting observance of religious forms and ceremonies. His family discipline was of the stern "Old New England" type. He married Cynthia Butts, a lovely and gracious woman, born March 16, 1773, and died May 19, 1814.
She descended from a family prominent in the public and social colonial life of New England. Her father, Deacon Stephen Butts, of Westminster, Connecticut, born June 15, 1749, married, October 8, 1769, Lucy, born February 21, 1752, daughter of William Hibbard, who was not only a captain in the Colonial army, but was also in the War of the Revolution. When the British ships appeared before New London in 1778, he marched with a company of men to the relief of the endangered town. Stephen Butts was the son of Joseph and grandson of Samuel Butts, who married Sarah Maxfield, July 22, 1701. Samuel Butts was a man of note in his state. He was elected thirteen times to the Colonial Assembly from Canterbury, Connecticut, during the period from 1715-1729. Samuel was the son of Richard Butts, who married Deliverance Hoppin, daughter of Thomas and Elizabeth Hoppin, who came from England to Dorchester, Massachusetts, in 1636. Phineas Carter died November 8, 1814. Their children were Lucy, Pamelia, Lucius, Polly, Stephen, Pliny, Cynthia, Cedocius and Pulaski.
Pulaski Carter, youngest son of Phineas and Cynthia (Butts) Carter, was born in Westminster, Connecticut, June 23, 1813. He was an infant of nine months when his mother died. His father desired him to be a physician, but his tastes were decidedly for mechanics. He left home, going to Brooklyn, Connecticut, where he learned the trade of blacksmith. Among many interest- ing papers left by Mr. Carter, was one dating back to his Brooklyn days, a commission under date of May 9, 1839, as ensign of Seventh Company of the 2Ist Regiment of Infantry, Militia of Connecticut, taking rank April 8, prior, In an account book of April 15, same year, are the following entries: Cap, sword, belt, plume and epauletts, $21. His honorable discharge is also among his papers dated just before he left for Pennsylvania. From Brooklyn he went to the scythe-making shops of Captain Wheelock Thayer, at East Winsted, Connecticut. Captain Thayer, a man of ability and education, was much interested in his young apprentice, and continued that interest in after years, visiting him in his Pennsylvania home and writing him many valuable sugges- tions concerning his business affairs.
After his father's death in 1840, Mr. Carter, then a young man of twenty- seven, visited Pennsylvania looking for a factory site, finally locating in Providence, now the First Ward of Scranton, Pennsylvania. In 1841 he began
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there the manufacture of scythes. In June, 1842, in company with Jerrison White, he purchased the Sager & White Axe Factory and added axes to his line of manufactures. He soon bought out his partner's interest, and in 1843 took into partnership a boyhood friend, Henry Harrison Crane, but after a few years Mr. Crane, tiring of the responsibility of business, retired from the firm, but remained in the works in a responsible position for more than thirty years. Mr. Carter then assumed the entire ownership and management of the business, which he continued until his death, purchasing a thirty acre tract of land and erected buildings thereon that came to be known as "The Capouse Works." It was for years one of the most important industries of the Valley.
When the Free School idea was first advanced, Mr. Carter was one of its warmest advocates and worked valiantly for its establishment. He was interested in all educational matters. For twenty-eight years he served as director and treasurer of the Providence school board. In 1857, when the first graded school building was erected in Providence, the first one anywhere in the region, there was a large public celebration of the event. Mr. Carter was given great credit for the enterprise, a leading citizen alluding to him as "the corner stone" upon which the free school system had been founded. He was equally devoted to the cause of temperance, ever denouncing the evils of the drink habit, and opposing the granting of licenses. He was both feared and respected by the liquor dealers. He also worked to reclaim the drunkard, and won many a man back to a life of sobriety and usefulness.
Pulaski Carter, son of Phineas and Cynthia (Butts) Carter, married (first), August 5, 1839, Susan Sophia Spaulding, of Abington, Connecticut, she died November 1, 1841, leaving an infant daughter who bore her name. The child died in 1842. Mr. Carter married (second), August 7, 1843, Olive Ingalls, of Hampton, Connecticut, a double cousin of his first wife. She was born November 13, 1819, and died December 8, 1898.
Her ancestry in America traces from Edmund Ingalls, a native of England, born in Lincolnshire, in 1598. He came to Salem, Massachusetts, in 1628, in Governor Endicott's company. In 1629 Edmund Ingalls and four others founded the settlement at Lynn, Massachusetts. In 1648, while traveling on horseback to Boston, he was drowned in the Saugus river, a defective bridge giving way under his horse causing the calamity. His wife Anne was his executrix. Henry Ingalls, son of Edmund, born 1629, was a land owner of Ipswich, and one of the first settlers of Andover, Massachusetts, where he bought land of the Indians, making payment in clothing and trinkets of personal adornment. He was a wealthy man for the times, and a leading citizen. He married Mary Osgood, daughter of John, who was Andover's first representa- tive to General Court. Henry Ingalls died February 8, 1718. Henry (2), son of Henry and Mary (Osgood) Ingalls, born December 8, 1656, died February 8, 1698, like his father, was prominent in colonial affairs. He married, June 6, 1688, Abigail, daughter of John, Jr., and Mary (Webster ) Emery, of Newbury, Massachusetts. Joseph, son of Henry (2), was born in Andover, Mass- achusetts, in 1697, and married Phebe, born August 22, 1723, daughter of John Farnum ; he descended from Ralph Farnum, Boston, Massachusetts, 1635. Joseph Ingalls died December 29, 1757. Joseph (2), son of Joseph (I) and Phebe (Farnum) Ingalls, removed to Pomfret, Connecticut. He married
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