USA > Pennsylvania > Colonial and revolutionary families of Pennsylvania; genealogical and personal memoirs, Volume II > Part 27
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DEACON EDWARD PUTNAM, son of Lieutenant Thomas and Ann (Holyoke) Putnam, was born at Danvers, Massachusetts, July 4, 1654, and died there March 10, 1747. He was many years a deacon of the First Church in Danvers, and was one of the leading citizens of the town. He is known as the first historian of the Putnam family. His brother, Lieutenant Joseph Putnam, was the father of General Israel Putnam. Deacon Putnam married, June 14, 1681, Mary Holten.
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ISAAC PUTNAM, ninth child of Deacon Edward and Mary (Holten) Putnam, was born at Salem Village, March 14, 1698-99, and died at Sutton, Massachu- setts, in 1757. He lived the greater part of his life in Topsfield, Massachu- setts. He married, December 20, 1720, Ann, daughter of Jonathan and Susanna (Trask) Fuller ; great-granddaughter of Lieutenant Thomas Fuller, a founder of Woburn, Massachusetts, and of Captain William Trask, one of the first settlers of Massachusetts Bay Colony, and a commander, under Governor Endi- cott in 1637, in the expedition against the Pequot Indians, receiving from Massachusetts a large grant of land in recognition of his military services.
NATHAN PUTNAM, son of Isaac and Ann (Fuller) Putnam, was born at Danvers, October 24, 1730, and died at Sutton, August 6, 1813; was many years a local magistrate and known as "Esquire Putnam". He was a manu- facturer of scythes in the active years of his life. He married, August 2, 1752, Betsey, daughter of James Buffington, who was born at Salem, February 28, 1734, and died at Sutton, August 26, 1810.
MICAH PUTNAM, son of Nathan and Betsey (Buffington) Putnam, was born at Sutton, April 8, 1754, and married, May 26, 1774, Anna, daughter of Nathan- iel and Jane (Dwight) Carriel. Mr. Putnam resided for a time at Grafton, Massachusetts, from whence he removed to Oneida county, New York, and settled there in the town of Paris, now Marshall. Mrs. Putnam died at Paris, August 24, 1794.
NATHANIEL PUTNAM, son of Micah and Anna (Carriel) Putnam, was born at Grafton, Massachusetts, May 7, 1786, and removed with his parents to Oneida county, New York; later removing to Waterville, in the same county, where he died March 6, 1876. He married at Paris, now Marshall, July 18, 1811, Betsey, daughter of Jaines and Thankful (Tower) Wheeler, of Berkshire, Tioga county, New York, formerly of Worcester county, Massachusetts. She was born at Rutland, in the latter state, September 3, 1786, and died at Waterville, New York, May 20, 1871.
GEORGE PUTNAM, second child and only son of Nathaniel and Betsey (Wheeler) Putnam, was born at Berkshire, New York, July 2, 1814, and spent practically his whole life in Waterville, New York, where he was an active and influential citizen, and where he died February 21, 1891. He mar- ried at Vernon, New York, July 23, 1841, Sarah Maria Bill, who was born at Remsen, New York, August 12, 1818, and was a daughter of Dr. Earl Bill by his wife Sarah Jackson, both natives of Connecticut.
Mrs. Putnam's father, Dr. Bill, was graduated at the Berkshire Medical School, and entered upon the practice of medicine at Steuben, Oneida county, New York, successfully engaging in the work of his profession until the age of eighty-six years, when he took up his residence with his son, General Horace Newton Bill, in Cleveland, Ohio, and here died, May 16, 1864, aged ninety-four years. Dr. Bill was a son of Oliver and Martha (Skinner) Bill; grandson of Lieutenant James Bill, an officer in the Colonial Militia of Con- necticut; great-grandson of John and Mercy (Fowler) Bill, and great-great- grandson of Philip Bill, a volunteer in the Connecticut troops in service in King Philip's War, and whose family, after his death, received from Connecticut a grant of land in consideration of his service in that war. Philip Bill resided
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in Boston, Massachusetts, as early as 1660, but established his permanent home, some years later, in what is now Groton, Connecticut.
Mercy Fowler (great-grandmother of Dr. Earl Bill), was a daughter of Captain William Fowler, an eminent citizen of Connecticut, who served as a member of the first Council of War in that colony, which was formed in 1673 upon the capture of New York by the Dutch; and was a granddaughter of Lieutenant William Fowler, a member of the Governor's Council for the Col- ony of New Haven, and was also the granddaughter of Edward Tapp, who like- wise served in the Governor's Council.
EARL BILL PUTNAM, the subject of this sketch, a son of George Putnam, of Waterville, New York, by his wife Sarah Maria Bill, was born at Waterville, December 31, 1855. He prepared for college at Phillips Exeter Academy, and entered Harvard University in 1875, from which he was graduated with the degree of bachelor of arts in the class of 1879, being the thirty-sixth of his surname to enjoy that honor. Choosing the legal profession, he was admitted to the New York State Bar in 1882, and located at Rochester, New York, where he practiced his profession until 1895, when he removed to Phila- delphia, where he has since resided. He is a member of the Law Association of Philadelphia, the American Academy of Political and Social Science, the Historical Society of Pennsylvania, Sons of American Revolution, New York; Sons of Revolution, Pennsylvania; New England Society, the Colonial Society of Pennsylvania, the Rittermouse, University, Art, Country, Merion Cricket and Philobiblion clubs of Philadelphia; the Harvard Club of New York, Fort Schuyler Club of Utica, New York, and Waterville (New York) Golf Club.
Earl Bill Putnam married, October 17, 1882, Grace Williams Tower, daugh- ter of the late Charlemagne Tower, Esq., of Philadelphia, by his wife Amelia Malvina Bartle. Mrs. Putnam is a descendant of John Tower, who came to America in 1647 and settled at Hingham, Massachusetts; and also of John Alden, Richard Warren and William Mullins, three of the "Pilgrim Fathers," who were passengers on the "Mayflower," 1620.
Earl Bill and Grace Williams (Tower) Putnam had issue, seven children, viz .: Amelia Tower Putnam, born August 26, 1883; Grace Tower Putnam, born May 5, 1886; Charlemagne Tower Putnam, born February 16, 1888, died February 17, 1889; Earl Bill Putnam, Jr., born February 1, 1890; Sarah Eliza- beth Putnam, born July 9, 1892; Alfred Putnam, born January 9, 1895; Kath- arine Putnam, born August 4, 1898.
WILLIAM WILSON CURTIN
ROLAND CURTIN, grandfather of the subject of this sketch, was born at Dysert, County Clare, Ireland, in 1764, and came of a long line of Irish ancestors, who had resided in County Clare. He was a son of Austin Curtin, and was sent by his father to an Irish college at Paris, France, where he was a student in 1797, during the second "Reign of Terror", and becoming embroiled in the struggle between the Directory and the monarchical portion of the National Council, narrowly escaped the guillotine. Forced to flee the country, he took passage for America, and landed in Philadelphia, where he remained for some time and then made his way to Centre county, Pennsylvania, locating first at Phillipsburg and later at Milesburg, where he engaged in the mercantile busi- ness in 1803. He took an active part in political affairs and was elected sheriff of Centre county in October, 1806. He became interested in the development of the iron deposits of that section, and in 1810, in connection with one Moses Boggs, erected a forge at what was afterwards known as the Eagle Iron Works, Centre county. He became sole owner of the forge in 1815, and in 1818 erected the Eagle Furnace, and other iron works. In 1825, he purchased the Antes grist and saw mills near what became Curtin Station, on the Bald Eagle Valley Railroad, and in 1830 erected a rolling mill there. He became identified with all the public improvements of his county, and was one of the leading manufacturers of that section for a period of forty years. He removed to Bellefonte shortly before his death.
He married (first), November 25, 1800, Margery Gregg, born in 1776, died January 15, 1813, daughter of John Gregg, a soldier in the Revolutionary War; and (second), in 1814, Jean Gregg, born February 17, 1791, died March 14, 1854, daughter of the Hon. Andrew Gregg, and first cousin to his first wife. The ancestry of the two wives of Roland Curtin is as follows :
David Gregg, great-grandfather of Hon. Andrew Gregg, was a native of Argyleshire, Scotland, and among the Scotch Protestants who sought an asylum from religious persecution in the north of Ireland. He was one of the Protes- tants of the North, within the walls of Londonderry, who defended themselves against the assaults of the army of James II, from April to August, 1690, and was a captain in the army of William III.
John Gregg, son of David, resided at Bally-Arnatt, County Londonderry, Ireland, where his four children, John, David, Andrew and Rachel, were born and reared. John, the eldest son, inherited his father's estates and remained in Londonderry, carried on a large mercantile and shipping trade in which he associated with him a son, Andrew, who on a business trip to America, shortly prior to the Revolutionary War, sought an interview with his cousin, the Hon. Andrew Gregg, then a student at Newark, Delaware. Another son, William, came to Pennsylvania and settled among his compatriots at Paxtang, Lancaster county, where he died in 1744, leaving his estate to his uncle Andrew, and a sister in Ireland.
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David and Andrew Gregg, with their wives, their sister Rachel, and her husband, Solomon Walker, came to America in the same vessel, about the year 1722. Landing at Boston, they made their way to the Scotch-Irish set- tlement in Londonderry, New Hampshire, where David settled and spent the remainder of his days, rearing a large family, some of whom and their de- scendants achieved eminence in the business, professional and political life of that and other sections of the United States.
Andrew Gregg and his brother-in-law, Solomon Walker, not being pleased with New Hampshire, returned to Boston and sailed for New Castle, where they arrived in the autumn of 1725. They spent the winter at a furnace belong- ing to Sir William Keith, Lieutenant Governor of Pennsylvania, on Christiana creek, near Newark, Delaware, and in the spring of 1726 sought homes on the Susquehanna. The Walkers located in the Cumberland valley.
Andrew Gregg, the youngest of the sons of John Gregg, of Bally-Arnatt, County Londonderry, Ireland, was born there in the first decade of the eighteenth century. He is said to have married (first) in Ireland, but this is improbable if the date of their arrival in America is correctly stated, since he could not then have been of marriageable age. He settled in Drumore township, Chester county, at Chestnut Level, participating in the organization of Chestnut Level Presbyterian Church, about 1730, and residing there until 1748. His settlement was an unfortunate one, inasmuch as the title to his plantation was disputed and he eventually sold out to the claimant at a nominal sum. His first wife died, in the last year of his residence there, leaving him six small children. He was captain of one of the companies in the "Associated Regiment for the West end of Lancaster County, on the Susquehanna" in 1747-48. In 1750 he re- moved to Middleton township, Cumberland county, locating on a farm about two miles north of Carlisle, where he resided until his death, November 18, 1789. He married (second), about 1752, Jean Scott (b. 1725, d. September 30, 1783), daughter of William Scott, who had emigrated from county Armagh, Ireland, and settled at Chestnut Level, Drumore township, Lancaster county, with two sons, Moses and Thomas, and four daughters, Elizabeth, Margery, Jean and Fanny.
By his first wife, whose name is unknown, Andrew Gregg had two sons- John and James, both of whom were soldiers in the Revolutionary War, and four daughters-Rachel, Margaret, Joan, and Elizabeth. John, the eldest, had two daughters: Margery, first wife of Roland Curtin, and Elizabeth, who mar- ried George McKee in 1798. By his second wife, Jean Scott, he had two sons: Andrew, of whom presently; and Matthew, who was a wagon-master in the Revolutionary Army, January 9, 1778, to August 14, 1780.
Hon. Andrew Gregg, son of Andrew and Jean (Scott) Gregg, was born in Middleton, Cumberland county, Pennsylvania, June 10, 1755. His early education was acquired in the Latin School of John Steel, in Carlisle, Pennsyl- vania, and completed at an academy at Newark, Delaware. On leaving school he appears to have spent some time in Northumberland county, and was a private in Captain Robinson's company of rangers and saw active service, receiving later a grant of land for depreciation pay. In 1779, he became a tutor at the College of Philadelphia, now the University of Pennsylvania. In 1783 he engaged in the mercantile business at Middleton, Pennsylvania, and
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remained there for four years. On his marriage, in 1787, he settled at Lewis- town, then being laid out by his father-in-law, General James Potter, and Major Montgomery, in what two years later became Mifflin county. In February, 1789, a tract of land was surveyed to him in Penn's Valley, two miles east of "Old Fort," in what is now Centre county, and he settled thereon. It was then in Northumberland county, became part of Mifflin county in September, 1789, and Centre county in 1800. He was elected one of the eight representatives from Pennsylvania to the Second United States Congress in 1791, and was seven time re-elected, serving in that body with distinction until 1807, when he was elected to the United States Senate, in which he served a term of six years, retiring March 4, 1813. He removed to Bellefonte in 1814, and was elected president of "Centre Bank". December 19, 1820, he was appointed Secretary of the Commonwealth by Governor Heister, and served until De- cember 13, 1823. On May 15, 1823, he was nominated for governor, to succeed Heister, but was defeated by John Andrew Shulze. He died in Bellefonte, May 30, 1835. He married, January 29, 1787, Martha (b. Apr. 10, 1769, d. Aug. 20, 1815), daughter of General James Potter, a brilliant officer of the Revolutionary War. They had seven daughters and three sons. Jean, the second child, was the second wife of Roland Curtin, and Mary, the third child, was the wife of Dr. Constans Curtin, a brother of Roland.
John Potter, the grandfather of Martha (Potter) Gregg, emigrated from County Tyrone, Ireland, landing at New Castle on the Delaware, September, 1741, accompanied by his wife and his sister Isabella and her husband John Hamilton. About 1746 he located near the present site of Greencastle, in Antrim township, Franklin county, then Lancaster, and in 1750 included in the county of Cumberland, from which Franklin county was organized in 1784. He was the first sheriff of Cumberland county in 1750, and in September, 1756, was commissioned captain of a company in Lieutenant Colonel Armstrong's Battalion, which he accompanied in the expedition against the Indian town of Kittanning, when that town was destroyed and many white captives rescued from the savages. The date of death of John Potter is unknown. His wife died in 1778.
General James Potter, son of John, was born at the banks of the river Foyle, County Tyrone, Ireland, in 1729, and came to Pennsylvania with his parents in 1741. February 17, 1756, he was commissioned ensign of his father's company, in Colonel Armstrong's Battalion, and in September of that year accompanied the expedition against Kittanning, in which he was wounded. He continued in the Provincial forces and was commissioned captain, February 17, 1759, having at one time command of three companies in defense of the Pennsylvania frontier. He removed to Fort Augusta, now Sunbury, Northum- berland county, in 1768, and January 24, 1776, was elected colonel of the Upper Battalion of Cumberland County Militia. He was in command of the Cumberland County Regiment at the battle of Trenton on the morning of December 26, 1776, and at Princeton on January 3, 1777. April 5, 1777, he was appointed third brigadier general of Pennsylvania Militia, and he was in command of a brigade at the battles of Brandywine and Germantown. During the winter of 1777-78 he was in command of outposts near Valley Forge. His later military service was in connection with the frontier troubles in his own
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county. He was elected major general of militia, May 23, 1782. General Potter was a delegate to the Pennsylvania Constitutional Convention of 1776, was elected to the Supreme Executive Council, November 14, 1781, and was a mem- ber of the Council of Censors in 1784.
General James Potter married (first) Elizabeth Cathcart, and (second) Mary (Patterson) Chambers, daughter of James Patterson, by his wife Mary Stewart, daughter of George Stewart, who settled in the Conestoga valley in 1717. By his second wife, General Potter had three daughters and one son, one of the former being Martha, wife of the Hon. Andrew Gregg. The son Judge James Potter was the father of Mary Potter, who married Dr. William Irvine Wilson, and was the mother of Catherine Irvine Wilson, who became the wife of Governor Andrew Gregg Curtin, and mother of the subject of this sketch.
By his first wife, Margery Gregg, Roland Curtin had four sons: Austin, James, Roland and John. By his second wife, Jean Gregg, he had two sons: Andrew Gregg, the distinguished war governor of Pennsylvania, of whom presently ; and Constans, a prominent ironmaster ; and five daughters : Martha, wife of Dr. William Irwin; Ellen Honora, wife of William H. Allen, M. D., LL. D., successively president of Dickinson college, Girard college and the State College of Pennsylvania; Margery, wife of Thomas R. Reynolds, of Carlisle; Nancy, the wife of Dr. Clark, of Philadelphia; and Julia, of Phila- delphia, unmarried.
HON. ANDREW GREGG CURTIN was born at Bellefonte, Centre county, Penn- sylvania, April 23, 1815. His early education was acquired in the schools of his native town. He later entered the Harrisburg Academy, and completed his academic education at the celebrated academy at Milton, Northumberland county, under the Rev. David Kirkpatrick. He began the study of law in the office of the Hon. W. W. Potter, the leading lawyer of the Bellefonte bar, and finished by a course in the law school of Dickinson College, Carlisle, then in charge of Judge Reed, one of the leading jurists of Pennsylvania. He was admitted to the bar of his native county in April, 1837. His rise to eminence in the practice of his profession was rapid, and was attended with like success in political matters, in which he early took an active part. A ready and effective speaker, he took an active part in the election of General Harrison to the presidency in 1840, and canvassed the state for Henry Clay in 1844. He was appointed Secretary of the Commonwealth by Governor Pollock, January 15, 1855. That office at that time included the superintendency of the public schools of the state, and Curtin won lasting fame by his intelligent and effective work in behalf of the public schools. He it was who instituted the Normal Schools. He was elected governor in 1860, and his record as the great war governor during the trying time of the Civil War is too well known to need repetition. He ranked easily among the ablest of the war governors of the northern states. His foresight was demonstrated by the establishment of the Pennsylvania Reserves, and a crowning achievement was the establishment of the orphan school for the children of soldiers who fell in the war.
The late Colonel A. K. McClure, a life-long friend and associate of Governor Curtin, in a memorial address delivered in February, 1895, refers eloquently to Curtin's part in laying a broad foundation for the public school system :
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"Forty-one years ago I sat in this hall (House of Representatives, Harrisburg) with Curtin, as a member of the convention whose action called him into public life. He had been named for the position of governor himself, but was young and heartily yielded to Whig sentiment that pointed to the late Governor James Pollock as the man to lead the party. Pollock summoned Curtin to lead his forces in the campaign, which he conducted with masterly skill and energy, resulting in Pollock's election, and Curtin was named as Secretary of the Commonwealth. He was the first in that office who systematically or- ganized the free schools on a broad basis and opened the way for the universal educa- Later, as Governor, he was enabled to build * * tion of the children of the State. * upon this solid foundation. Next to Thaddeus Stevens, the author of the free school law, and Governor Wolf, who approved it, our grand system of education of to-day is more indebted to Andrew G. Curtin than to any other public man."
Governor Curtin was appointed by President Grant, in 1869, Minister to Russia, and he served until August, 1872. He then returned home and was chosen a delegate to the State Constitutional Convention of 1873. He was elected to represent the 20th District in the 47th, 48th, and 49th Congresses, and served for several years as chairman of the Committee on Foreign Affairs. He died at his home at Bellefonte, Pennsylvania, October 9, 1894.
Andrew Gregg Curtin married, May 30, 1844, Catherine Irvine Wilson, born January 17, 1821, daughter of Dr. William Irvine Wilson, of Bellefonte, and his wife, Mary Potter (b. Apr. 8, 1798, d. Jan. 19, 1861), daughter of Judge James Potter and granddaughter of General James Potter, of the Revolution, before referred to as the maternal great-grandfather of Governor Curtin.
Hugh Wilson, the great-great-grandfather of Catherine Irvine (Wilson) Curtin, was one of the founders of the Craig or Irish settlement in Allen town- ship, Northampton county, Pennsylvania, about 1736. He was born in County Cavan, Ireland, in 1689, he had come to Pennsylvania about 1724, with the Craigs, Boyds, Mays, Jamisons, and others more or less connected by ties of con- sanguinity, who settled first in Bucks county, from whence a number of them, including Elder Thomas Craig, a brother-in-law of Hugh Wilson, migrated to Allen township, in what became Northampton county in 1752. With the organization of Northampton in 1752, Hugh Wilson became one of its first justices and county commissioners, holding the former position until March 15, 1767. He died in 1773. He was a son of Thomas Wilson, of Coote Hill, County Cavan, who had emigrated from Scotland and was an officer of King William's army at the Battle of Boyne. Thomas Wilson, son of Hugh, born 1724, came with his father to the Irish settlement in 1736, and resided there until 1792, when he removed to Buffalo Valley, now Union county, Pennsyl- vania, where he died February 25, 1799. During the Revolution he was engaged in supplying the Patriot Army with flour. He married, in 1760 Elizabeth Hays, daughter of John and Jane Hays, who had emigrated from Londonderry, Ireland, and settled in Allen township, in 1736. Mrs. Wilson removed, with her sons Thomas and William, to Beaver county, Pennsyl- vania, after her husband's death, and died there in 1803. Hugh Wilson, son of Thomas and Elizabeth (Hays) Wilson, born in Allen township, Northamp- ton county, Pennsylvania, October 21, 1761, served a number of "tours of duty" under Colonel Nicholas Keen during the Revolutionary War. He removed to Buffalo Valley, now Union county, Pennsylvania, where he was a inerchant, 1798-1804, removing thence to Lewisburg, Pennsylvania, where he died October 9, 1845. He married, February 17, 1790, Catherine Irvine (b. Nov. 16, 1758, d. Aug. 21, 1835), daughter of Captain William Irvine, who
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was a cousin to General William Irvine, of the Pennsylvania line, in the Revolution. Dr. William Irvine Wilson, son of Hugh and Catherine (Irvine) Wilson, and father of Catherine Irvine (Wilson) Curtin, was born near Hartleton, now Union county, Pennsylvania, November 10, 1793. He studied medicine under Dr. James Dougal, of Milton, Pennsylvania, and in 1818 removed to Earlytown, Centre county, Pennsylvania, later to Potter's Mills, in the same county, and finally to Bellefonte, where he died September 22, 1883. He married, February 23, 1819, Mary, daughter of Judge Potter, before mentioned.
The Hon. Andrew G. and Catherine Irvine (Wilson) Curtin had five children : Mary Wilson, who married George F. Harris, M. D., of Bellefonte ; Jane Gregg, who married William H. Sage, of Ithaca, New York; Martha Irvine, who married Captain Kidder Randolph Breeze, U. S. N .; William Wilson, of whom presently; and Catherine Wilson, who married Moses DeWitt Burnet, of Syracuse, New York.
WILLIAM WILSON CURTIN, son of the Hon. Andrew Gregg and Catherine Irvine (Wilson) Curtin, was born at Bellefonte, Centre county, Pennsylvania, March 27, 1851. He received the major part of his education in Europe. He resides in Philadelphia, and has been for a number of years engaged in the fire and marine insurance business. He is a director of the Philadelphia Bourse and of the Spring Garden Insurance Company, and connected with a number of other prominent business and financial institutions. Mr. Curtin is a lineal descendant of at least five participants in the Revolutionary struggle of 1776- 1783, and is a member of the Pennsylvania Society of the Sons of the Revolu- tion. He is a member of the Rittenhouse, Philadelphia Country, Merion Cricket, Philadelphia Racquet, and Down Town Clubs. He married, October 24, 1875, Harriet Harding, born August 28, 1853, daughter of the Hon. Garrick M. Harding, and they have issue: two daughters, the elder of whom, Marion Harding, born May 29, 1878, married, June 25, 1904, James D. Winsor, Jr., of Philadelphia, and had issue, Curtin Winsor, born December 23, 1905 ; James D. Winsor (3), born June, 1908, and Katherine Irvine. The younger daughter, born February 5, 1884, married, June 25, 1905, Lawrence J. Brengle, of Philadelphia, and had issue, Ann Brengle, born September 18, 1906.
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