USA > Vermont > Rutland County > History of Rutland County, Vermont, with illustrations and biographical sketches of some of its prominent men and pioneers > Part 109
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899
HUGH G. HUGHES. - ALBERT BRESEE.
as have other producers in this region ; which trade was opened by Hugh G. Hughes. A short time before his death he opened a slate trade with Australia - beginning by sending a car load there - of which the Vermont and New York slate producers are now getting the ben- efit in their trade with those countries. Mr. Barnes, the lessor of the quarry, died some years after the lease was executed between him and Mr. Hughes. After Mr. Barnes's death Mr. Hughes dealt with the administrators, one of which told the writer several times that the Poultney quarry paid the estate the best under Mr. Hughes's management of any property in the estate, which contained a large amount of other property. Mr. Hughes bought the entire leased property of the Barnes estate in 1876, including the quarry interest and the farm con- nected with it. After this purchase he increased his business in the quarrying and manufac- ture of slate ; and while he was lessee he did a very large business, seldom having less than fifty men in his employ, and sometimes he had as many as seventy-five. After leasing the quarry, Mr. Hughes gave it the name of " Eureka," which name it has since horne. Quite a settlement has grown up in the locality. A post-office has been established which also bears the name " Eureka." In December, 1878, Mr. Hughes made a sale of one-fourth interest in this property to R. Wynne Roberts, a gentleman from England ; the deed bears date Decem- ber 10, 1878. Mr. Roberts entered into partnership with Mr. Hughes, and that partnership existed while Mr. Hughes lived. The business continued to prosper and thrive until the time of Mr. Hughes's death, which occurred on March 6, 1884, by an accident which created a terri- ble sensation in his family and among his friends and throughout the community. He was standing at the bottom of his deep quarry and near him was his book-keeper, Owen Carvay, and Griffith Hughes, a workman. At the same time there was being hoisted by the derrick a stone weighing perhaps three or four hundred pounds, and when near the top broke in fragments ; pieces falling on the head of Mr. Hughes killed him instantly. Mr. Griffith Hughes was severely injured, and lingered about two weeks when he died. Thus passed away a prompt, energetic. thorough and successful business man, at the age of forty-one years. There are other men who have had success at the slate business, but few, however, could have secured Mr. Hughes's success in the "Eureka." The slate in the " Eureka " is of the unfading green variety, and is not excelled, if equaled, anywhere. What has created a demand for the Ver- mont and New York slate is its variety of colors, and the unfading green variety, the most beautiful slate in the world, is produced from the " Eureka" in its highest excellence. The expense of working the "Eureka " is greater than that of most other quarries ; and it is proba- ble that nothing short of the indomitable will of Mr. Hughes, combined with his knowledge and skill in the working of slate, could have made a success of the "Eureka." Mr. Hughes was a hard worker himself, and with the large number of men in his employ, he knew what they were all about and efficiently directed them. Mr. Hughes was married in 1872 to Katy E. Jones, of Fairhaven. She survives with two children, a boy and a girl, to mourn the loss of a kind and indulgent husband and father. The town has lost an intensely loyal citizen to his adopted country, who seldom failed to go the polls, and always urged his workmen as a duty to attend all elections. The loss to the slate interest in this region can hardly be repaired in this generation.
B RESEE, ALBERT, is the son of Christopher Bresee, jr., who was born near Egremont, Mass., on the 13th of March, 1788. His father, Christopher. sr., came, in 1796, to Pitts- ford, Vt., and settled on the farm now owned by his grandson, Wallace E. Bresee, the farm having never been out of the family. He died at Bresee's Mills, in Brandon (about one and a half miles from his home), on the 10th of August, 1826, being then sixty-nine years of age. He was the father of fourteen children.
Christopher Bresee, jr., moved about the year 1813 to the farm in Hubbardton now owned by Alexander Walch. On the 8th of July, 1813, he married Clarissa, daughter of Abner Ash- ley, the first settler on that farm. Abner Ashley died in Bethany, N. Y., January 26, 1838, at the age of eighty-six years. Christopher Bresee became the father of four children : Solon, born April 25, 1814; Merit, born August 17, 1815, and lived but three weeks ; Clarissa, born August 8, 1824; and her next elder brother, Albert Bresee, who was born on the 9th of April, 1822. He came with his father March 17, 1837, to the farm on which he still lives, which then contained 157 acres, and which has since been increased to an area of 212 acres. It is the farm settled first by William Rumsey, and owned until 1837 by Chauncey S. Rumsey, now of Castleton.
Here Albert Bresee has passed the greater portion of his life. He has been justice of the peace, selectman two years, lister three years, and in 1878 and 1879 represented the town in the Legislature.
But the fact which reflects the greatest honor on the life of our subject, is the studious and persevering method with which he has devoted his time in the introduction and testing of many varieties of potatoes, and in originating new varieties. He is the originator of the Early Rose
900
HISTORY OF RUTLAND COUNTY.
potato. He began experimenting with seeds in 1850, and by continued perseverance suc- ceeded in producing varieties with the result mentioned. In 1853 he procured the Garnet Chili, the parent of the Early Rose, from Chauncey E. Goodrich, of Utica, N. Y. The Early Rose was originated in 1861. Since 1850 Mr. Bresee has continued experimenting with seed- lings. He also originated in 1862 the Peerless variety, in 1861 the Prolific, and later the Ad- vance, which he deems superior to the Early Rose.
On the 16th of December, 1868, Albert Bresee married Lucy Ann Manchester, then the widow of Lyman J. Gault. Her father, John Manchester, a native of Shaftsbury, Vt., lived for a time in Hampton, N. Y., and before and after in Hubbardton, on the farm now owned by Mr. Train, near the Castleton line. He died in August, 1864. Lucy Ann Manchester was born in Hampton, N. Y., May 9, 1830, and was the fifth of six children : Mary, Arnold, Huldah, Lewis P., Lucy Ann and John. One child. Merit, has blessed the marriage of Albert Bresee. He was born August 24, 1870.
K ELLOGG, NEWTON, son of Eusebia ( Messer) and Samuel Harwood Kellogg, was born in Pittsford, Vt., on the 28th of December, 1819, and lived with his parents and worked on the home farm until his eighteenth year, receiving in the mean time the benefit of a common school education. In the summer of 1838 he worked a short time with Mr. Flagg, a carpenter and joiner of Middlebury, but was forced to relinquish the business because of ill-health. In the fall he engaged as clerk in the store of William F. Manley, at Pittsford Mills, where he re- mained through the winter. In the spring of 1839 he became clerk for Henry Simonds, in the village of Pittsford, and lived with him about three years.
In the year 1843 he went west. staying a few weeks in Geneva, N. Y., with his uncle, Asa Messer. There he accepted an offer 10 act as clerk for a Mr. Olmsted, of Lafayette, Ind., and left Geneva in the month of August, passing a few weeks before beginning his engage- ment in Layfayette with relatives in Ohio. He went from Toledo down the Maumee canal to Lafayette ; but the malarial atmosphere and unwholesome water of the voyage had injured his system, and he was taken sick with fever and ague and dysentery, and was obliged to leave Lafayette in a few days and return to Vermont. Immediately upon his arrival in Vermont he was prostrated with bilious fever, from which he did not recover for several weeks. For nearly a year after the fall of 1843 he worked in the store of John Simonds, of Shoreham, Vt. He came to Rutland in 1845 and first worked in the store of Luther Daniels, until 1849 (most of the time), when he accepted a position as teller in the Bank of Rutland, of which John B. Page was then cashier. This position Mr. Kellogg resigned in 1854 and entered the Bank of Roy- alton as cashier, William Skinner being its president. Fearing, however, that he would be dissatisfied with the position, he did not remain long, but accepted the position of assistant cashier in the Bank of Rutland which he had left. The Rutland Savings Bank, which was chartered in 1850, and organized in the year following, transacted its business in the same room with the Bank of Rutland, and Mr. Kellogg, by reason of his position, was practically the book-keeper of the bank until the resignation of John. B. Page as treasurer, and the appoint-, ment of Luther Daniels, treasurer, in the year 1858. After the decease of George T. Hodges, president of the Bank of Rutland, and the promotion of John B. Page to that office, Mr. Kel- logg was appointed cashier, but failing health would not permit him to continue in the busi- ness, and he retired from the bank in 1861. He was subsequently appointed agent for the payment of United States pensions and performed the duties of that position about three years, meanwhile was also book-keeper in the office of the State Treasurer. He then went the way of all office-holders and gave place to General Barstow, of Burlington, his successor under the new administration. On the 30th of May, 1855, Mr. Kellogg was united in marriage to Julia, daughter of William and Cynthia ( Hickok) Page, of Rutland, who is still living, and has now two children, Samuel Hickok, born August 4, 1856; and John Newton, born July 27, 1860. Louise Chipman Kellogg, born on September 27, 1864, died on the 25th of October, 1865.
In 1855, after his marriage, he purchased the old homestead of his wife's mother, then a widow. He sold it in 1861, when he left the bank, to his brother-in-law, J. B. Page, and re- moved to Pittsford, where he purchased a small place of T. F. Bogue, near the Methodist Church. Here he passed several years very pleasantly, driving to Rutland every day and dis- charging his duties as pension agent and book-keeper for the State Treasurer. The whole- some exercise of caring for his horse and cow, and the fourteen miles' drive every day, soon restored his health, which has remained comparatively good since that time.
In 1865 he returned to Rutland and occupied the brick house which stands on the corner of Court and Center streets, and which was erected by John B. Page. His mother-in-law and her daughter, Fannie C. Page, resided with him until the decease of the former and the mar- riage of the latter. The house is now owned by the Congregational society and occupied as a parsonage. Mr. Kellogg afterward purchased the house next south of the parsonage of J. N. Howard, in which he now lives.
HARRISON KINGSLEY.
901
NEWTON KELLOGG. - HARRISON KINGSLEY.
Mr. Kellogg has been employed more or less every year in the Savings Bank since its or- ganization, and in 1874, being one of the trustees of the bank, he was elected assistant treas- urer. Luther Daniels, president and treasurer of the bank, having reached the advanced age of eighty years, felt that he could no longer bear the responsibility and labor of the offices, and left the bank. William M. Field was then elected president, and Mr. Kellogg was promoted to the office of treasurer, which he still holds. The position, however, is an arduous one, the bank deposits having increased from 8600,000 in 1876 to $1,600,000 in 1886. Mr. Kellogg, with the assistance of the president, has been able to perform most of the clerical labor of the bank until the present time.
General Amos Kellogg, a Revolutionary soldier and a lineal descendant of Lieutenant Jo- seph Kellogg, of Brookfield, Mass .. and grandfather of the subject of this sketch, was born in Lebanon, Conn., on the 7th of July, 1770. and died on the 6th of March, 1826 in Pittsford, Vt. He was a very prominent man in Pittsford, and held the office of town clerk at the time of his death. His son and the father of Newton Kellogg, viz., Samuel Harwood Kellogg, was born in Pittsford on the 12th of July, 1798, and died there on the 24th of March, 1877. He immediately succeeded his father in the office of town clerk, which position, in conjunction with that of town treasurer, he retained for fifty-one consecutive years. He was also a prom- inent member of the Congregational Church of Pittsford, and one of its deacons at the time of his decease. He united with this church at the early age of fourteen years. He was twice married ; first on the 17th of February, 1819, to Eusebia, daughter of Moses and Abigail (Stevens) Messer, of Orwell, by whom he had four children : Newton, born December 28, 1819; James, born December 6, 1822: Abigail, who died in infancy ; Mary Elizabeth, born May 15. 1835 : James died July 2d, 1850 ; Mary E. became the wife of Charles M. Farrar, and now lives in Denver, Col.
Eusebia Messer was born in Claremont, N. H., and was granddaughter of Rev. Josiah Stevens, a Congregational minister who was a missionary on the Isle of Shoals, and died there. She died in Pittsford on the 26th of June, 1852, aged fifty-nine years and eight months.
Samuel H. Kellogg married Caroline M. Cheney, widow of James Cheney, for his second wife. She is now living.
The following preamble and resolutions were adopted at the town meeting held in Pittsford, Vt., on April 9, 1877, for the purpose of choosing a successor to Hon. Samuel H. Kellogg, who died on the 24th of the previous month, and who for more than fifty years had filled the office of town clerk and treasurer : -
WHEREAS, God in his providence has seen fit to remove from our midst the Hon. Samuel Harwood Kellogg, a descendant from a line of honored Christian ancestors, some of whom by their labors and influence were largely instrumental in laying the foundations of our civil and religious institutions ; and
WHEREAS, In his public life, covering more than half a century, he exhibited at all times and under all circumstances the sterling qualities of honesty and faithfulness, and was devoted to the welfare of the people whom he served, thus showing himself to be a worthy son of hon- ured sires and fully impressed with the importance of carrying forward the work which had been by them so auspiciously commenced, the work of improving, elevating and christianizing the people, and
WHEREAS, In his private life he was the model gentleman, the devoted Christian and faith- ful friend of all, therefore,
Resolved, By the citizens of Pittsford in town meeting assembled, that in the death of Mr, Kellogg we deeply lament not only the loss of a faithful public servant, but of a man who in all his social relations was a model of excellence and purity.
Resolved, That while we would most gladly have retained for a longer period his presence, his wise counsels, example and influence, we bow in humble submission to the divine will, feeling confident that what is our loss is his gain.
Resolved, That we tender to his surviving family our heartfelt sympathy in their affliction, and trust that they, with ourselves, will profit by his example and strive to imitate his virtues.
K * INGSLEY, HARRISON, of Clarendon, was born on the 29th of August, 1813, in the town of Shrewsbury, near the Clarendon line. His father was Chester Kingsley, a descendant of one of four brothers who came to this country from England at an early day. He removed from New York State to Shrewsbury, locating about a mile east of the hamlet of East Clarendon, and there built a carding and cloth-dressing mill. The carrying on of this line of business constituted his life-work. He remained there until 1825, when he placed his establishment in charge of his son Harvey (now living in Rutland), and removed with his family to East Clarendon, where there is a fine water-power, with a carding and cloth-dressing mill, a saw-mill and grist-mill. This property he purchased and carried on the business more than ten years, when he removed to the village of Brandon (where he had a son living), and
902
HISTORY OF RUTLAND COUNTY.
leased a similar establishment of John Conant, leaving the Clarendon works in charge of his son Horace. In the year 1840 his two sons, Harrison and Harvey, purchased the Clarendon mill property. Chester Kingsley married Rhoda Weeks, daughter of John Weeks, who was the father of Wilham and Newman Weeks; she died in 1852 and her husband in March, 1855.
Harrison Kingsley was the sixth child of Chester and Rhoda Kingsley. His younger days were passed in attending the district schools and helping about his father's factory. Arriving at twenty-one years of age, he worked two years in a similar factory in Ludlow and three years in another at Manchester. In 1840 he purchased the East Clarendon property, with his brother Harvey, as stated, and they conducted the business together for fourteen years, when Harrison purchased his brother's interest. In the year 1855 he put in an overshot water-wheel, added another run of stone in the grist-mill and otherwise improved the property. In the flood of October, 1869, the saw-mill was carried away, and the greater part of the timber of that sec- tion having disappeared, the mill was not rebuilt. Since his purchase of the property but little cloth-dressing has been done, but the carding-mill has been in use more or less every year.
Mr. Kingsley has here led a quiet and retired life, declining to mingle in politics or to accept office ; but such lives, though little known to the world at large, are not therefore with- out an influence for good on any community. Now, in his later years, surrounded with the fruits of his labor, he may look back upon a well-spent lite.
Mr. Kingsley was married on the 12th of July, 1838, to Caroline R. Taylor, of Andover. They have three children-Samuel Taylor Kingsley, born July 27, 1841, married Amelia Todd, of Boston, in 1867, and is now living in Rutland ; Allathea, born October 30, 1845, married L. Squier, a farmer in Clarendon ; John H., born June 25, 1852, married Lizzie Wyman, of Rutland, and lives at the homestead, where he now runs the grist-mill.
L OTHROP, HENRY FRANKLIN. Hon. Henry F. Lothrop, son of Howard and Sarah (Williams) Lothrop, was born in Easton, Mass., March 1, 1820.
Howard Lothrop was son of Edmund, one of the early settlers in Easton. The family has been prominent in all the history of that town. A sister of Henry Lothrop married Hon. Oliver Ames. Cyrus Lothrop, a brother, is now a leading citizen of the town. Another brother, Hon. George V. N. Lothrop, has been an eminent lawyer in Detroit, Mich., and is now (1886) United States minister to Russia.
Mr. Howard Lothrop came to Pittsford near the close of the last century on business con- nected with what was then known as the Keith Iron Furnace. in which he had invested some capital. He became superintendent and greatly enlarged and developed the business, which was then an important industry of the county. In 1809 he sold the property, of which he had become the principal owner, to Gibbs & Co., and returned to Easton and there resided till his death in 1857. During his stay in Pittsford, and afterward, he acquired possession of consid- erable real estate. To look after this, and other interests of his father's property, Henry F. Lothrop, at twenty-four years of age, came to Pittsford and made the town his home. In 1846, two years after his arrival here, he built the house in which he lived till his death.
In 1848 he was married to Eleanor, daughter of Captain Sturges Penfield. For more than fifty years Mr. Penfield was prominent in all the business interests of Pittsford. He and his brothers Allen and Abel were eminent among the early and influential settlers. They estab- lished and carried on various branches of manufacturing, which were important and valuable to the town, in their time. They were foremost in the support of the church and the schools. Very soon after his settlement in Pittsford, Mr. Lothrop became a leading man in the affairs of the town. His judgment in all matters of business was excellent. His integrity and up- rightness were never questioned. No man in the town was more resorted to for counsel. No one has been a more valuable friend to those in need. No one has had more to do in the care and trust of unsettled estates. Thoroughly true himself, he respected and admired all that was true in others. That which was false or pretentious, he profoundly hated. He was a pa- triot who loved his country and his town. Unable himself to go as a soldier, because of phys- ical infirmity, he was unwearied in his efforts to provide for the comfort of those of his towns- men who did go, and thoughtful for the welfare of their families in their absence. To the last his interest in the soldiers who went from the town was manifested, not only in the zeal with which he helped them to observe their anniversaries, but to more efficient purpose and with more sac- rifice in the aid which he often afforded them. His purse was always open to their necessities; and he generously lent or gave of his money to those who were trying to secure houses for themselves. He was several times selectman of the town. He served with honor both as representative and senator in the Legislature of Vermont. He was influential in securing the passage of the bill creating the State Board of Agriculture. When the board was formed he was a member of it, till failing health and strength made it impossible for him longer to hear the burden of it. He was also, for a time, president of the Rutland County Agricultural Society. Himself a practical farmer, he was deeply interested in all matters relating to the
903
HENRY FRANKLIN LOTHROP. - WALTER C. LANDON.
improvement of farms and the rearing of stock. And always, whether in public office or out of it, his generous public spirit was shown in time and work and money, which, almost with- out stint, he put into whatever was for the general good of the community. From its organi- zation till his death he was a director in the Baxter Bank of Rutland. His business sagacity and financial wisdom contributed not a little to the soundness and strength of that most stable institution. Mr. Lothrop had no children. He died of pulmonary disease at his home April 20, 1885.
L ANDON, WALTER C. Although it is well known that the Landon family are of Welsh extraction, no definite line of ancestry can be traced beyond the grandfather of our sub- ject, viz .: Elisha Landon, who was born on the 3d of June, 1766, in Salisbury, Conn., and lived there until early in the present century. He then came to Sunderland, Vt., where he died on the 12th of April, 1817. Noah Landon, father of Walter C., and the eldest of ten children, was born in Salisbury, Conn., May 10, 1790. On the 30th of April, 1820, he married Pamelia Wilcox, a native of Manchester. She died on the 26th of December, 1879, in her eighty-sixth year, and he followed her January 24. 1881, leaving a family of two sons and a daughter. War- ren E., the eldest, was born on the 5th of May, 1824, and now lives in Chaplin, Conn. The daughter,.Fannie P., was born on the 22d of August, 1838, and is now the wife of Samuel B. Nichols, of Brooklyn, N. Y. Walter C. Landon, the second child, was born on the 17th of August, 1831, in Sunderland. He received such education as the excellent New England com- mon schools afford, attending winters only, and in summer time working out. At the early age of fourteen years he left hont and worked for two years on a farm in Arlington, Vt. Thence he went to Bennington, where he passed four years as clerk in the general store of P. L. Rob- inson. In the spring of 1852 he came to Rutland, and became clerk in the hardware and grocery store of Landon & Graves, which was known as the " old red store," and stood on the site of Sawyer's block. The firm soon after became J. & A. Landon, but because of his ex- perience and ahilities, and being a cousin of the proprietors, the subject of our sketch retained his position, in all about five years. Then, with Chester Kingsley as junior partner, he opened a grocery store in the same building, which J. & A. Landon had vacated for a new building. After the lapse of three years Mr. Landon sold out to Kingsley, and with J. W. Cramton bought in the Central House, which stood on the present site of Clement's bank building. Mr. Landon assumed the management of this house, and remained there until March, 1863. In the mean time, however, he enlisted for three months in the First Vermont Regiment (infantry) and was detailed as color sergeant, and after went out as captain of Co. K. in the Twelfth Regiment. After he sold his interest in the hotel to Mr. Cramton, he entered into partnership with J. N. Baxter in September, 1863, and opened a grocery store in the building now occu- pied for a like purpose by E. D. Keyes. In the following May Mr. Landon obtained control of the entire business and carried on the store until November, 1865. He then removed his busi- ness to the Perkins Block, on the corner of West street and Merchants Row, which he had purchased. In January, 1868, with C. F. Huntoon as junior partner, he originated his present business in the same building which he now occupies. Mr. Huntoon's health failed in Octo- ber, 1875, and he sold his interest to Mr. Landon, who has continued alone ever since. From a small beginning he has increased his business until he may safely say, with pardonable pride, that he is proprietor of one of the most extensive hardware houses in the State. Not only, however, has he attained prominence in the private walks of life, but he has been repeatedly and against his inclination, called upon to serve in various public capacities. From 1864 to 1875 he was town, village and school treasurer ; was one of the listers in 1874, 1881, 1882, 1883 and 1884; has held the office of water commissioner for nine years, and holds it now ; is also one of the board of selectmen ; was for twenty years an active member of the Rutland fire department, and for ten years preceding 1882 was chief engineer of the fire de- partment. He also represented the town of Rutland in the State Legislature in 1882-83, a distinction the more prominent by reason of the relative numerical population and commer- cial and manufacturing importance of the town. Of course Mr. Landon is a member of the Grand Army of the Republic, as what soldier is not ? He has been a member of the Knights of P'ythias ever since the organization of the order in Vermont. He is now, and since its be- ginning has been, one of the directors of the Baxter National Bank, is one of the directors of the True Blue Marble Company, and treasurer of the Evergreen Cemetery Association. On .the 16th of June. 1861, Walter C. Landon married Mary M. Manley, of Rutland. They have one child, a son, Charles Huntoon Landon, who was born April 3d, 1867, and is now at home attending school.
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