[[130.timothy|(<-- 130. Col. Timothy(6) Seymour)]] [[start|(Back to Start)]] [[132.truman|(132. Lieut. Truman(6) Seymour -->)]]
====== 131. Norman Seymour ======
131. NORMAN6 SEYMOUR (//[[066.timothy|Timothy]]//5,
//[[021.timothy|Timothy]]//4, //[[008.John|John]]//3,
//[[003.John|John]]//2, //[[001.Richard|Richard]]//1),
born at West Hartford, Conn., 3 Dec. 1752, died at Sheffield,
Mass., 28 June 1796; married first, MARY McNEIL of Litchfield, Conn., born ,
died at West Hartford., 16 Dec. 1776, daughter of Capt. Archibald and Sarah
(Johnson); married second, at West Hartford, 15 June 1779, CATHERINE SEYMOUR,
born 29 Aug. 1756, died at Chester. Conn., 19 Mar. 1814, daughter of Moses and
Rachel (Goodman). She married second. at Newington, Conn., 1 June 1802, as his
third wife, Rev. Samuel Mills of Saybrook, Conn., born at Simsbury, 22 June
1752, died at Chester, Conn., 17 Feb. 1814.
^ Child by first wife: ^^^^
| | i. | McNEIL7, b. abt. 1776; d.at New York, N.Y., 19 Jan. 1852 ae, 76; m. RACHEL HAWKINS, wood. at Delhi, N.Y., 1 Jan. 1867, dau. of Joseph and Rachel (Harris). He kept a tavern at Troy, N.Y., 1814-16, and afterwards in Boston, finally in New York City. Child: ||
| | | I. | Elizabeth McNeil8, b. at Boston, 11 Feb. 1822; d. at New York, 25 Nov. 1826. |
^ Children by second wife (the youngest five baptized 13 May 1797): ^^^^
| | ii. | INFANT, d. 30 Oct. 1781. ||
| 228. | iii. | [[228.norman|NORMAN]]. b. 20 Sept. 1782. ||
| 229. | iv. | [[229.alexander|ALEXANDER]], b. 5 Oct. 1784. ||
| | v. | MARY, b. 10 Aug. 1787; d. at New York City, 16 May 1880; m. at Buffalo, N.Y., 15 Sept. 1822, DR. THOMAS HASTINGS, b. at Washington, Conn., 15 Oct. 1784, d. at New York City, 15 May 1872, s. of Dr. Seth and Eunice (Parmelee). A son was Rev. Thomas Samuel Hastings, D.D.; a daughter, Mary Seymour Hastings, m. (1) Rev. Daniel Bond, (2) Rev. George Warren Wood, D.D.; another daughter, Catherine Eunice Hastings, m. Rev. William W. Scudder, D.D., and d. in Ceylon. See below. ||
| | vi. | ARDON, b. 5 Jan. 1790; res. Rome, N.Y.; m. 8 Sept. 1819, SARAH MARSH, b. at Norwich, Conn., 28 Sept. 1782, d. at Rome, N.Y., 27 Feb. 1852, dau. of Dr. Jonathan and Alice (Fitch). He was commissioned First Ueut. in the Oneida County Cavalry, 1819, and rose to the rank of Colonel. Children, b. at Rome: ||
| | | I. | Mary Harland8, b. 22 Oct. 1820. |
| | | II. | Sarah Marsh, b. 31 July 1823; m. 16 Dec. 1846, Josiah Peckham Fitch, b. at Sheldon, Vt., 19 Apr. 1817, s. of Dr. Chauncey and Nancy (Peckham); six children. He was a lawyer, rem. from Rome to New York City. |
| | vii. | CATHERINE, b. 8 Oct. 1792; m. MILES P. SQUIER, D.D., of Geneva, N.Y. ||
**THOMAS HASTINGS** (1784-1872), husband of **MARY SEYMOUR**, removed in youth
with his father from Connecticut to Clinton, Oneida County, N.Y. Although
without much opportunity to obtain a musical education; he was so talented by
nature that at the age of twentytwo he was teaching music.
In 1816 he published, with Solomon Warriner, //Musica Sacra,// a collection of
sacred music, and afterwards published, several other works of this type, one in
collaboration with Lowell Mason. He was also an original composer, to the extent
of perhaps a thousand tunes, one of the most noted being the musical setting for
Toplady's "Rock of Ages."
He removed to New York City in 1832, at the solicitation of several churches,
and here continued his important and self-imposed task of improving the music
used in the churches. For several years he was choirmaster in the Bleecker
Street Presbyterian Church. In 1858 he received from the University of the City
of New York the degree of Doctor of Music.
**THOMAS HASTINGS** (1860-1929), son of Rev. Thomas Samuel and Fanny (de Groot),
and grandson of Thomas and Mary (Seymour), was a native of New York City, and
after studying at Columbia went to Paris where he was graduated in 1884 from the
Ecole des BeauxArts. From 1886 until 1911, when his partner died, he worked in
partnership with John Merven Carrere, and thereafter continued under the same
firm name (Carrere & Hastings). The work of the firm quickly found recognition,
following the erection of Flagler's Ponce de Leon Hotel, the Alcazar Hotel, and
two churches in St. Augustine, Florida, They received many commissions for the
buildings and gardens of large country estates. Later, their main work was the
designing of monumental buildings, ;uch as the Richmond Borough Hall, New York
City, and the Royal Bank of Montreal, Canada. They were the architects of
Woolsey Hall and Memorial Hall at Yale University (1906). The greatest
achievements of the firm, according to the Dictionary of American Biography (see
vol. 3, pp. 518-520, and vol. 8, pp. 388-390, for a comprehensive account of
Hastings's work), were the Senate and House office buildings, Washington, D.C.
(1905-06), the Century Theatre, New York City (190609), and the New York Public
Library (1911).
Hastings began his work under the influence of the French Renaissance school,
adapting and moulding it to meet changing conditions and new problems, always
with sure taste and scrupulous attention to detail. He was interested in city
planning and beautification, helped to formulate the city plan of Hartford,
Conn., 1911, and designed the industrial town for the U.S. Steel Corporation at
Duluth, Minn. He designed the Princeton Battle Monument, at Princeton, N.J., and
the base of the Lafayette monument in the court of the Louvre, Paris. He was a
chevalier of the Legion of Honor, and the third American to be awarded (1922)
the Royal Gold Medal of the Royal Institute of British Architects.
The author was acquainted with Mr. Hastings and in conversation with him found
him very proud of his Seymour blood.
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