USA > Pennsylvania > Colonial and revolutionary families of Pennsylvania; genealogical and personal memoirs, Volume II > Part 42
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The name Van Hooren, Van Hoorn and Van Horn is derived from a large, pleasant and rich city with a convenient port of the Zuyder Zee, about twenty miles north of Amsterdam. It was surrounded by broad dykes, large pasture ground and fine gardens and walks. The name was written Hoorn or Hooren. It was from this place Jan Cornelissen (or John the son of Cornelius) Van Hoorn came to this country. The time of his arrival is not known, but he was in New Amsterdam as early as June, 1645. From a power of attorney, which he executed October 4, 1647, for the purpose of collecting money from his guardian in Holland, it would seem that he came to this country before attaining his majority. He was one of the remonstrants against defending the city when attacked by the English in 1664. In October of that year he took the oath of allegiance to the King. Among his children was a son Joris, who mar- ried Maria Rutgers, March II, 1666. At an early period the name was quite common at Hackensack, which is no doubt the place where the family first settled in New Jersey. Joris was the father of eight children, one was a son Rutgers, born January 5, 1667, so named in honor of his mother's family. The name is still honored in New Jersey by Rutgers College, New Brunswick. He married Neeltje Van Vechten. He purchased a large tract of land at Com- munipaw, New Jersey, where he settled. His name is inseparably linked with the history of that place. He accumulated a large amount of landed property, including tracts on the Raritan river (Middlesex county) and at Plainfield, New Jersey. He was known as "Rutt", though he generally wrote his name Rutgert Van Hooren. Another son of Jan Cornelissen Van Hoorn was:
CORNELIS JANSEN VAN HORN, who married, October 4, 1659, Anna Maria Jansen and had children baptized in New York, namely: Johannis and Ger- rit.
GERRIT VAN HORN, son of Cornelis Jansen and Anna Maria (Jansen) Van Horn, was baptized December 17, 1671. He married, July, 1691, Elsie Provost and had issue.
CAPTAIN CORNELIUS VAN HORN, probably a son of Gerrit and Elsie (Pro-
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vost) Van Horn, was born in 1695, died February 12, 1744, buried near Whitestone Station, New Jersey. Although probably a son of Gerrit Van Horn, he was surely a grandson of Jan Cornelissen, the emigrant. He bought land at Whitestone before 1729. He is supposed to be the Captain Cornelius Van Horne who led a New Jersey contingent of troops in the expedition against Canada in 1737. His will, dated Readington, February 3, 1743, names wife Hannah, seven sons, three daughters and "my bro. Abraham".
CORNELIUS VAN HORN, son of Cornelius and Hannah Van Horn, in his will dated June 3, 1783, names four sons and four daughters. The sons were: Abraham, Simon, Cornelius and William.
WILLIAM VAN HORN, son of Cornelius Van Horn, was born in 1750, died in 1827. He was placed on the pension rolls of Middlesex county, New Jer- sey, in 1818 "for services as a private soldier of the New Jersey Line". He married Elizabeth -
JOHN VAN HORN, son of William and Elizabeth Van Horn, was a resident of New Jersey. He married Patience Morgan.
WILLIAM VAN HORN, son of John and Patience ( Morgan) Van Horn, mar- ried Priscilla Caroline Rossiter, born in 1807.
FRANCES VAN HORN, daughter of William and Priscilla Caroline (Rossiter) Van Horn, was born at Pittsburgh Park. She married, January 15, 1857, John S. Burns, born Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, February 20, 1840. Children: Ida Bell, born December 4, 1857; Caroline Harriet, January 6, 1859; Virginia, Feb- ruary 3, 1860; William Van Horn, May 15, 1864; George Garrett, July 23, 1866; Jessie Rossiter, June 22, 1870; Alexander Clark, November 15, 1871.
ANNA HARDING DENNY CORCORAN
ANNA HARDING DENNY (Mrs. William M. Corcoran), of Pittsburgh, Penil- sylvania, may lay claim to being one of the oldest of the many "Daughters of the American Revolution". Her number on the books of the order is 588 which is all the argument needed to establish her claim. She derives patriotic membership through the military services of her grandfather, Major Ebenezer Denny, her great-grandfather, Captain John Wilkins, as well as others of Revolutionary fame. She is a great-granddaughter of Agnes Parker (Mrs. William Denny), who was a daughter of John Parker and a granddaughter of Richard Parker, the American ancestor.
RICHARD PARKER and Janet his wife emigrated from Ulster, Ireland, in 1725, and settled three miles from Carlisle, acquiring land by patent, near the Pres- byterian meeting globe on the Cenedoguinet creek in Cumberland county, prov- ince of Pennsylvania, in 1734. His application made at that date was for the land on which he had "resided ye ten years past". Richard Parker died prior to 1750; his wife survived him fifteen years. Among their children were: I. John, see forward. 2. Thomas, born 1720, married Eleanor Ferguson. 3. Richard (2), born 1725, married Martha -. 4. William, born 1725, mar- ried and had issue. 5. Martha, died unmarried at age of eighty-four. 6. Su- sannah, married - Dunning and had issue. 7. James, married Mary (Elea- nor) Boyd.
JOHN PARKER, eldest child of Richard and Janet Parker, was born about the year 1716, died prior to 1785. He married Margaret McClure, who died in May, 1792. Children: I. Agnes, see forward. 2. Richard (3), born 1743, served in the War of the Revolution, afterward removing to Kentucky, where he died. 3. Elizabeth, born 1746, married Francis Campbell. 4. Mary, born 1748, married William Fleming. 5. Margaret, born 1751, married John Cal- houn and removed to Washington, D. C. 6. Alexander, born 1753, married Re- becca Blair. 7. Andrew, served in the war of the Revolution; accompanied his brother Richard to Kentucky.
AGNES PARKER, eldest child of John and Margaret (McClure) Parker, was born in 1741, near Carlisle, Pennsylvania. She married, in 1760, William Den- ny, born 1737, in Chester county, Pennsylvania, died about the year 1800 in Carlisle, Pennsylvania. He removed to the Cumberland Valley in 1745, and was the first coroner of Cumberland county. During the Revolution he was commissioner of issues. He was the contractor and built the Court House at Carlisle in 1765; the building was destroyed by fire in 1845. He was a gen- tleman of the old school, high-minded and dignified in manner and conservative. Their children were: I. Ebenezer, see forward. 2. Pusella, born May 28, 1763. died February 22, 1849; married Simon Boyd, of Carlisle, an officer in the Second Battalion of Associators of Cumberland county. 3. William, died in infancy. 4. Nancy (Agnes), born August 31, 1768, died January II, 1845, unmarried, at Carlisle. 5. Margaret, born June 25, 1775, married Samuel Sim-
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ison. 6. Mary died aged three years. 7. Mary, born March 5, 1778, married George Murray, of Carlisle. 8. Elizabeth, born April 22, 1781, died March 27, 1848, unmarried, at Carlisle. 9. Boyd, born February 20, 1783, died at Pitts- burgh.
EBENEZER DENNY, eldest child of William and Agnes (Parker) Denny, was born at Carlisle, Pennsylvania, March II, 1761, died July 21, 1822, at Pitts- burgh, Pennsylvania, where he was buried in the First Presbyterian churchyard. He began his military service when he was but fifteen as a bearer of dispatches to Fort Pitt, and served until the close of the war. He was at the surrender at Yorktown, where he was detailed to plant the American flag on the parapet. Later he became adjutant to General Harmar and aide-de-camp to General Ar- thur St. Claire. He was captain of the Pennsylvania Continental Line. His "Journal" is printed in the Collections of the Historical Society of Pennsyl- vania and edited with a concise memoir by his son, William H. Denny. He was active in the war of 1812. He was one of the commissioners of Allegheny county and the first county treasurer. When Pittsburgh became a city he was the first mayor. He married, July 1, 1792, Nancy, daughter of Captain John Wilkins, progenitor of General John and Hon. William Wilkins. She was born in Carlisle, 1775, died May 1, 1806 (see Wilkins). Major Ebenezer and Nancy (Wilkins) Denny were the parents of four children: 1. Harmar, born May 13, 1794, in Pittsburgh, where he died January 29, 1852; he graduated at Dickinson College; was member of Pennsylvania Legislature, representative in Congress, member of Constitutional Convention of 1837-38, and honorably dis- tinguished as a lawyer, statesman and christian gentleman. He married Eliz- abeth P. O'Hara, daughter of General James O'Hara, of Pittsburgh, and had eleven children among them St. Clair. 2. William H., became a physician. He married (first) Sophia DuBarry, (second) Maria Poe; he had eight chil- dren, the issue of both wives. 3. St. Clair, see forward. 4. Agnes, married Edward Harding, of the United States army in Maryland, who rose to the rank of major ; they were the parents of four children.
ST. CLAIR DENNY, third son of Major Ebenezer and Nancy (Wilkins) Den- ny, died in Pittsburgh, August 18, 1858. He chose a military career and rose to the rank of major in the United States regular army. He was appointed second lieutenant of the Fifth Infantry Regiment, July 1, 1832; first lieutenant, November 30, 1835; captain, April 12, 1836; transferred to the Eighth Infan- try Regiment, July 7, 1838; resigned April 30, 1839. He was appointed major and paymaster, October 15, 1841. He married Caroline Hamilton. Children : I. Morgan Willoughby. 2. Elizabeth, married William Croghan Denny. 3. Anna H., see forward. 4. Caroline, married Joseph N. DuBarry. 5. William Irwin, married Elizabeth Wellendorf. 6. J. M. Brooke. Two children died in infancy.
ANNA HARDING DENNY, third child of Major St. Clair and Caroline ( Ham- ilton) Denny, was born in Green Bay, Wisconsin, May 29, 1834. She married William Matthews Corcoran, March 30, 1857. Children: 1. Caroline Denny, married Asa P. Childs, Jr., January 23, 1884; two children: Joseph Du Barry, William St. Clair. 2. William St. Clair D., married Jennie C. Howe, no issue. 3. Matilda Denny, died in infancy.
MAJOR SAMUEL W. JEFFRIES
MAJOR JEFFRIES is a descendant of the fifth generation from the Revolution- ary officer, Captain Tristram Moore, of Chester county, Pennsylvania.
Captain Tristram Moore was commissioned captain of the Eighth Company, Eighth Battalion, Chester county (Pennsylvania) militia, Colonel Patterson Bell, September 6, 1777. In 1782 he was captain of the Fourth Company of the same battalion. He married Sarah -, and had issue :
Hannah Moore, daughter of Captain Tristram and Sarah - Moore, married Nathan Edwards.
Esther Edwards, daughter of Nathan and Hannah (Moore) Edwards, mar- ried James Jeffries Sr.
JAMES JEFFRIES JR., son of James Sr. and Esther (Edwards) Jeffries, mar- ried Mary Ann Chalfont and had issue:
MAJOR SAMUEL WICKERSHAM JEFFRIES, son of James Jr. and Mary A. (Chalfont) Jeffries, was born in Baltimore county, Maryland, August 14, 1848.
HENRY W. C. GLEFFER
HENRY W. C. GLEFFER traces his ancestry to Deacon Edward Converse, the first of his family in America, and is of the sixth generation from Captain Pain Converse, the Revolutionary officer.
DEACON EDWARD CONVERSE, of Charlestown and Woburn, Massachusetts, the first of his line in America, is believed to be Edward Conyers, of Wakerly county, Northampton, England, of the eighteenth generation in England. The family was founded by Roger De Coigneries, who was born in France in the year 1010. He was one of the trusted chieftains of William the Conqueror and as such accompanied him in his invasion of England and was with him at the battle of Hastings. On the field of that battle, William the Conqueror caused to be erected a memorial building of great magnificence which he named "The Abbey of Battle" in which building he placed certain monks and en- joined on them to pray for those who died in battle, and to preserve a faith- ful record of all those who shared in the victory. On this roll appears the name of Roger de Coigneries. After the subjugation of England, William placed him over the important castle of Durham and made him constable, which high office was settled on him and his heirs forever. Down through eighteen generations the name has gradually changed to De Coniers, Conyers, Convers and Converse. Seven centuries nearly, after Roger De Coigneries, in lineal descent, was:
EDWARD CONYERS (Converse), born January 30, 1590, in Wakerly, North- ampton England married (first) Jane Clarke, of Theckenham county, Wor- cester, England, who died before 1617. He married (second) in England, Sarah -, who died January 14, 1662, married (third) September 9, 1662, Joanna Sprague, widow of Ralph Sprague, of Charlestown, Massachusetts, who died February 24, 1679. In March, 1630, with his wife Sarah and three chil- dren, Josiah, James and Mary, he left England with Governor Winthrop's com- pany, arriving outside Salem harbor, June 12, 1630. He was one of those who settled in Charlestown where they organized a church which two years later was removed to Boston, ever after being known as the "First Church of Bos- ton". They immediately organized another church in Charlestown, since known as the First Church; "Edward Converse and wife" were members. He was a man of some wealth, considerable influence and a rigid Puritan. In less than a year after settling he established a ferry, the first between Charlestown and Boston, and for several years it was his principal business. He was made a freeman in 1631, selectman from 1665 until his removal to Woburn, was chief in the erection of the First Church in Charlestown. When "Woobourne" was recognized by the general court of Massachusetts as the twentieth town in the colony and a regular town organization effected, on April 13, 1644, the freemen of the town made choice of a board of selectmen. The name of Edward Con- . verse stands second on the list of those so chosen. From that time until his death he was foremost in all public business. He was one of those chosen to
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settle with Charlestown the matter of boundary between the two towns. Year after year he was one of the board of commissioners for the trial of "small causes". In 1660 he was a deputy to the general court. For nineteen years, from 1644 till 1663, when he died, he was annually chosen selectman. He was ever prominent as a church member, was one of the first two deacons appointed and remained in office until death. His will dated August, 1659, and an inven- tory of his estate made and recorded October 7, 1663, show an estate valued at £827. The children of Deacon Edward Converse were all by his second wife, Sarah: 1. Deacon Josiah, born in England. 2. Lieutenant James, born in Eng- land in 1620. 3. Mary, born in England in 1622. Her first husband, by whom she had issue, was Simon Thompson, of the Woburn and Winchester Thomp- sons. 4. Sergeant Samuel, see forward.
SERGEANT SAMUEL CONVERSE, youngest of the children of Deacon Edward and Sarah Converse, was baptized March 12, 1637, in the First Church, Charles- town, died February 20, 1669. He was admitted freeman in 1666. He met an untimely death by an accident at the corn mill which he inherited jointly with his brothers from Deacon Edward. The East Cambridge records show the manner of his death. He married, June 8, 1660, Judith, daughter of Rev. Thomas and Mary (Dalton) Carter. She survived him and married Giles Fifield. Rev. Thomas Carter was settled pastor over the church at Woburn in 1642, continuing until his death, September 5, 1684. The children of Sergeant Samuel and Judith (Carter) Converse were Samuel, see forward, and Abigail.
SAMUEL CONVERSE, only son of Sergeant Samuel Converse, was born at Wo- burn, Massachusetts, April 4, 1662, died in Thompson parish, Killingly, Con- necticut, about 1732. There is little record of his early life. He was left fath- erless at the age of seven, and an orphan at sixteen by the death of his moth- er, Mrs. Fifield. His wife was Dorcas Thompson. They deeded land in 1705- 09-10. In the latter year he removed to and cultivated a farm in Thompson parish, Killingly, which he bought of Richard Evans, the first settler in Killing- ly. Samuel was the first settler in Thompson, now Putnam. In 1716 he sold the Evans farm and purchased another, part of the "Quinatisset Farm", about a mile southwest of Thompson Hill. Here he died. He and his sons were active in building Thompson church and head the list of church members at its organization, January 28, 1730. This denotes either seniority in age or leadership in position. The children of Samuel (2) and Dorcas Converse were: Samuel (3), Edward (ensign), Thomas, Dorcas, Pain, see forward, and Jo- siah.
CAPTAIN PAIN CONVERSE, fifth child of Samuel and Dorcas Converse, was born in Woburn, November 25, 1706, died September 10, 1781. His wife was Mary -. They joined the church in Thompson, he in 1730, she in 1735. He was prominent in church and town affairs. In 1760 he was chairman of the board of selectmen and active in the school districts in 1762. He was ensign of the company from Killingly, that marched "for the relief of Boston in the Lexington Alarm April 1775, under Captain Joseph Elliot, and is credited with seven days service," (see "Conn. Men in the Revo.", p. 14). He was lieuten- ant of a company of the Eleventh Connecticut Militia at New York in 1776. In 1777 he was captain of the Eighth Company, Eleventh Connecticut Regiment, served until March 1, 1779. In July, 1779, he was appointed captain of a com-
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pany in Colonel Levi Wells' regiment, but ill health forced him to decline. Cap- tain Pain had two children: Mary, married Nicholas Parker, and Pain, see forward.
CAPTAIN PAIN CONVERSE, (also Paine, Payne) son of Captain Pain and Mary Converse, was born in Thompson, Connecticut, October 28, 1739. He was an active business man, much employed in public affairs. He was one of the first selectmen chosen after Thompson became a town. In 1776 he was captain in the Fourth Battalion of Connecticut state troops under Colonel John Ely and Major Benjamin Clark. A portion of Colonel Ely's regiment served in Rhode Island. (See Payne Converse, Jr. "Conn. Men in the Revo.", p. 424). In 1790 he removed with his large family to Bridport, Vermont, near Lake Champlain in Addison county. He married, December II, 1760, Mary Lee. Their children were: Jeremiah, Barnard, Elias, Hamblin, see forward, Levina, Alfred, Orinda, Pain (3), Erastus, and Gardner.
HAMBLIN CONVERSE, son of Captain Pain and Mary (Lee) Converse, was born at Thompson, Connecticut, in October, 1767. He married Mary Burr, and has Hamblin (2) and Erastus.
ERASTUS CONVERSE, son of Hamblin and Mary (Burr) Converse, married Harriet Wilson and had issue :
MARTHA A. CONVERSE, daughter of Erastus and Harriet (Wilson) Converse, married Professor John Edward Gleffer.
HENRY W. C. GLEFFER, son of Professor John Edward and Martha A. (Converse) Gleffer, was born at Lancaster, Pennsylvania, December 1I, 1869, died 1908.
HOMER J. LINDSAY
The late Homer J. Lindsay, of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, was a descendant of the patriot soldier, Michael Frey, who was his maternal great-great-grand- father. The Buhoups line (also maternal) was also of Revolutionary fame. Michael Frey (as shown by the records of the war department at Washington, D. C.), served in the Third Regiment, Pennsylvania Line, in 1776, as a private. His name appears in the list of members of Captain Greydon's company. The records also show that he was a private of the Eleventh Pennsylvania Regiment, and was mustered out October 17, 1777. The Pennsylvania state records, ar- chives, third series, vol. 23, p. 657, show that Michael Frey re-enlisted and served as a private in Captain James Young's company of the Eighth Battalion Cumberland County Militia in 1779, under Colonel Abraham Smith. He did not lose his military ardor nor exhaust his patriotism in the Revolution, for the records of the war department show him as a private in the war of 1812, Captain Jacob Shuntz company, First Regiment of Riflemen (Humphrey Penna.). Michael Frey married Nancy Howard and had issue.
CHRISTINA FREY, daughter of Michael and Nancy (Howard) Frey, married William Bartelow and had issue.
MARY ANN BARTELOW, daughter of William and Christina (Frey) Bartelow, married John L. Buhoup and had issue.
MARGARET A. BUHOUP, daughter of John L. and Mary A. (Bartelow) Bu- houp, married Samuel D. Lindsay, and they were the parents of Homer J. Lind- say.
The Buhoup Revolutionary history is very interesting. John Buhoup, father of John L. Buhoup, was born in England and came to America with the British army into which he had been impressed or drafted. On the night of December 25, 1776, he deserted to the American army under Washington after a thril- ling escape from his pursuers with whom he exchanged shots. He enlisted in the Continental army and served throughout the war for Independence. He married and had a family who suffered the loss of their home by fire while he was in the army. John Buhoup also served in the war of 1812, from Lan- caster county, Pennsylvania. He died at Lancaster, Pennsylvania, aged nine- ty-eight years. His son, John L. Buhoup, married Mary Ann Bartelow, and their daughter Margaret A. married Samuel D. Lindsay, the grandfather of Homer J. Lindsay.
SAMUEL D. LINDSAY was born in 1823, died September 22, 1906. He mar- ried Margaret A. Buhoup, who died in 1905. The issue of this marriage was three children who died in childhood, and three who attained maturity as fol- lows: Anna M., whose first husband was John G. Young, whose two surviv- ing children are: Margaret H. (Mrs. Howard E. Jeffries), child, Margaret L., and Jane L. Young, unmarried. Mrs. Young (Anna M. Lindsay) married (sec- ond) John W. Williams, issue: Homer Oliver and Robina M. Williams. The second child and only son was Homer J. Lindsay. The third child was Robina
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S. Lindsay, who married (first) W. E. Duncan; their only child Edith, married James McClure. Mrs. Duncan (Robina S. Lindsay) married (second) William J. Sheraden.
HOMER J. LINDSAY, only son of Samuel D. and Margaret A. (Buhoup) Lind- say, was born December 7, 1859, died in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, March 5, 1907. He took an unusual interest in acquiring an education and in addition to the conventional branches acquired a good working knowledge of telegraphy, typewriting and stenography, branches that were to stand him good service in after life. He was ambitious and let no opportunity for advancement elude him. He had a pleasing, genial manner and agreeable personality, which com- bined with his natural keen business sense won him friends that were always ready to aid him in his business career. At age of eighteen he was given a po- sition by Thomas D. Carnegie (brother of Andrew) as telegraph operator. In this capacity he attracted the favorable attention of Mr. Carnegie (Thomas D.) who in a short time made him his private secretary and from that passed on to further promotion. He remained in the Carnegie offices as long as Thomas D. Carnegie was connected with the Carnegie Steel Company, and upon his retire- ment he came under the personal direction of the president of the corporation. In that day the president of the company handled the contracts for steel rails and Mr. Lindsay was sent out to the buyers of the different railroads of the country as the president's representative to secure their rail orders. In this he was unusually successful and had the distinction of securing the largest single contract for steel rails ever placed with any concern in the country up to that date. This capacity for securing business together with his general high qual- ifications brought him further promotion and remuneration. He became a partner in the business and assistant to the president. From that day his fu- ture was assured and he took his rightful place as an important factor in the great steel business of the country, and one of its great captains. Business alone did not absorb all Mr. Lindsay's time or attention. He had a social and fra- ternal side to his nature that brought him into pleasing social relation with fellowmen. He belonged to the Duquesne, Country, German, Oakmont, Liber- ty Hunting and Fishing, the American and Press clubs of Pittsburgh, to the New York Athletic, the Transportation Club, the Strollers and Lakewood Coun- try Club. He was a member of the Young Men's Christian Association, and was a generous supporter of their work, and to the Sons of the American Rev- olution. Fraternally he was a Lodge, Chapter and Commandery Free Mason, and a member of Syria Temple, Nobles of the Mystic Shrine, and of the Order of Elks, Pittsburgh Lodge, No. 13. His political interests were shown when at nineteen he enlisted in the Pennsylvania National Guard, Company K, One Hundred and Forty-fifth Regiment, in which he served eight years. He was a member of the staff of Governor Samuel W. Pennypåcker, ranking as lieuten- ant-colonel. To this rank and position he was re-appointed by Governor Stuart. Politically his preference was for the principles of the Republican party which he warmly supported. A feature of his work as assistant to the president of the Steel Company was the management of the trust fund of five million dol- lars set aside by Mr. Andrew Carnegie for the benefit of employees who met with accidents at the steel works.
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