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book:willet8 [2010/05/02 18:40] jimsbook:willet8 [2014/11/01 14:36] (current) – external edit 127.0.0.1
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-====== Willet(8) Seymour ======+====== Willet Seymour ======
  
 //Note: This information was supplied by Paul Carleton Seymour.// //Note: This information was supplied by Paul Carleton Seymour.//
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 //[[038.samuel|Samuel]]//<sup>5</sup>, //[[015.samuel|Samuel]]//<sup>4</sup>, //[[038.samuel|Samuel]]//<sup>5</sup>, //[[015.samuel|Samuel]]//<sup>4</sup>,
 //[[006.Matthew|Matthew]]//<sup>3</sup>, //[[002.Thomas|Thomas]]//<sup>2</sup>, //[[006.Matthew|Matthew]]//<sup>3</sup>, //[[002.Thomas|Thomas]]//<sup>2</sup>,
-//[[001.Richard|Richard]]//<sup>1</sup>), born 1805 in Thompkins, Delaware, NY,  +//[[001.Richard|Richard]]//<sup>1</sup>), born 1805 in Tompkins, Delaware, NY,  
-died 1897 in Thompkins, Delaware, NY.  Married Mary Goodrich (b. 1814 in Sidney,+died 1897 in Tompkins, Delaware, NY.  Married Mary Goodrich (b. 1814 in Sidney,
 Delaware, NY; grandaughter of [[http://www.hopefarm.com/cashgen.htm|Zenas Goodrich]], Delaware, NY; grandaughter of [[http://www.hopefarm.com/cashgen.htm|Zenas Goodrich]],
 a Revolutionary soldier((Rev War Pension File R1780, CT Line)) and founder of Sidney, a Revolutionary soldier((Rev War Pension File R1780, CT Line)) and founder of Sidney,
 New York). New York).
  
-^ Children (born in Thompkins, Delaware, NY): ^^+^ Children (born in Tompkins, Delaware, NY): ^^
 | Lewis | died infancy | | Lewis | died infancy |
 | Amanda | | | Amanda | |
 | Alonzo | 1836 | | Alonzo | 1836 |
-| [[gilbert9|Gilbert]] | 1839 |+| [[gilbert9|Gilbert]] | 1839-1896 |
 | George Washington | | | George Washington | |
 | Charles | | | Charles | |
Line 24: Line 24:
 | Florence | | | Florence | |
 | Rector | | | Rector | |
 +
 +[[http://www.dcnyhistory.org/seymour]] Also from the Delaware County NY
 +historical website, more information about William's descendents, and our
 +ancestors.
 +
 +"**Willet Seymour** (1805-1897) was born on the old farm in the Town of
 +Tompkins on May 6, 1805, and lived his long life of 92 years on that farm,
 +never having any other home. On William Jr's death, Willet became possessor
 +of the old homestead and continued the occupations of his father, lumbering
 +and farming. Later on, he started, and for several years ran a grocery store
 +in Cannonsville. In 1830, he married his first cousin, Mary Goodrich,
 +daughter of Allen and Elizabeth (Lord) Goodrich, born in Sidney in 1814.
 +They had 10 children: Lewis, who died in infancy, Amanda, Alonzo,
 +**Gilbert** //(my GG Grandfather),// George Washington, Charles, Erastus,
 +Willet, Jr., Florence and Rector. Mary Goodrich's grandfather, Zenas
 +Goodrich was a Revolutionary soldier and a pioneer of Sidney."
 +
 +//I did some research into Zenas Goodrich, but it's sufficient to say that
 +he's another member of our family who fought in the Revolutionary War (Proof
 +document--Rev War Pension File R1780, CT Line).,  and another founder of yet
 +another American town, this time the one where both my sister and I, and
 +both of our parents were born.  Also where my Great Grandparents, Henry
 +Clinton Seymour, and Carrie Cuyle Seymour are buried, after my Grandfather,
 +Westley C. Seymour moved them both there just prior to the destruction and
 +flooding of Cannonsville.  Westley C. Seymour, and my Grandmother Leone Dann
 +Seymour, are also buried there, at Prospect Hill.//
 +
 +A postcard of Uptown Sidney in the 1950's:
 +
 +{{willet001.jpg|A postcard of Uptown Sidney in the 1950's}}
 +
 +//The last time I was there in 1999, it looked remarkably the same aside
 +from the cars, of course.  There was a disastrous flood in 2006 and as of
 +2010, it looks like the town is dying somewhat, since the factories that
 +fuelled the local economy have mostly closed down.  My grandmother, Leone
 +Dann Seymour, worked at the Hotel Decumber (the black sign in the picture on the right hand side) in the late 1930's as a young
 +divorcee raising my Uncle Richard Curtis before meeting my grandfather.  In 1999, it was still there.//
 +
 +**Another article on Willet Seymour**, a son of William and Dorothy Seymour,
 +and the father of the subject of this sketch, was born on the old farm in
 +Tompkins, May 6, 1805, and was reared to agricultural and lumbering
 +pursuits, in which he was employed throughout his life. On the death of his
 +father he became the possessor of the old homestead; and here he still
 +resides in his ninetieth year, retaining to a remarkable degree all his
 +faculties. His wife was Mary Goodrich, to whom he was married July 28, 1830.
 +She was born in Sidney, N.Y., September 1, 1814. Her grandfather, Zenas
 +Goodrich, who was a Revolutionary soldier and a pioneer of Sidney, married
 +Mercy Lawrence. Allen Goodrich, the father of Mrs. Willet Seymour, married
 +Miss Elizabeth Lord, a daughter of Eliphalet and Mary (Green) Lord.  Willet
 +and Mary died on the same day, March 30, 1897.
 +
 +Nine of the ten children born to Mr. and Mrs. Willet Seymour lived to reach
 +maturity namely Amanda, Alonzo, **Gilbert**, Charles, Erastus E., Willet.
 +Florence, and Rector, Lewis dying in infancy, and Washington dying at the
 +age of forty-eight years. Mrs. Seymour was a thrifty housewife, and before
 +her marriage had learned, besides the necessary household accomplishments,
 +the art of weaving, carding, and spinning, so that in her early, married
 +life she dressed her children in the homespun which she made entirely with
 +her own hands.
 +
 +//I had to look up carding, as I'd never heard of it before//:
 +[[wp>Carding]]  "Carding is a mechanical process that breaks up locks and
 +unorganized clumps of fibre and then aligns the individual fibres so that
 +they are more or less parallel with each other. The word is derived from the
 +Latin carduus meaning teasle, as dried vegetable teasles were first use to
 +comb the raw wool. These ordered fibres can then be passed on to other
 +processes that are specific to the desired end use of the fibre: batting,
 +felt, woollen or worsted yarn, etc. Carding can also be used to create
 +blends of different fibres or different colors. When blending, the carding
 +process combines the different fibres into a homogeneous mix. Commercial
 +cards also have rollers and systems designed to remove some vegetable matter
 +contaminants from the wool."
 +
 +//Following are three different stories on Alonzo Seymour, who was Willet's
 +oldest son, and who became a big rough lumber dealer in Philadelphia.
 +There's some overlap, but each story has some unique facts, so I included
 +them all.  Our Gilbert, his younger brother, seemed to do more farming than
 +lumbering, but was also involved at least part time in lumbering with
 +Alonzo.//
 +
 +//Continuing with Don's story//-"**Alonzo Seymour**, //(Gilbert's older
 +brother, Don's great grandfather and my great-great uncle)//, was born at
 +the old homestead in 1836 where he lived with his parents until he was 24
 +years old, working for and with his father at the business of lumbering and
 +farming, lumbering being the main business. He became very expert in every
 +part of the business - from cutting and getting out the timber and
 +manufacturing it into lumber, to rafting it down the Delaware River to
 +Philadelphia and selling it. In later life he became one of the best
 +salesmen and was one of the largest rough-lumber dealers in the city of
 +Philadelphia. In about 1859, he went into partnership with his father,
 +Willet, and bought 200 acres of land on Sands Creek on which there was a one
 +and a half story log house with a small shed on the backside used for a
 +woodshed and storeroom. There was also a good frame barn and a water-power
 +sawmill, and another small board house called the millhouse. In 1860, he
 +married Josephine Bradbury who was born in Sparta, NJ in 1838.  Her father
 +was John Bradbury, a minister, and Olive O. Terwilliger of Newburgh.
 +Immediately after their marriage, Alonzo and Josephine moved into the log
 +house on Sands Creek and proceeded to build a new house and raise a family.
 +They had six childlren: Oakley Arlington, Irvin Winfield, Ziba Angle (Don's
 +grandfather), June, John, Willet, and Kate. In addition, they adopted a
 +daughter, Belle (Shackleton). "
 +
 +ALONZO SEYMOUR,  is //(an old story as he's speaking of Alonzo in the
 +present tense) //a native resident of the town of Tompkins, which he
 +represents as a member of the County Board of Supervisors. His great-
 +grandfather, William Seymour, who, it is supposed, was of English birth
 +(//which we now know is inaccurate, but I wonder why they ever thought that?
 +Maybe William Jr. had no contact with him, and maybe why stories weren't
 +passed down very well from generation to generation//), for many years was a
 +prominent business man at Newburg, N.Y. He also built two Liverpool packets
 +(//according to the history of the town of Newburgh, he built 3//), the
 +"William Penn" and the "Ontario," the latter being a vessel of five hundred
 +tons burthen, the largest packet at that time in the Liverpool trade. He was
 +an extensive dealer in real estate, and did much for the improvement of the
 +village, where he was a resident to the time of his death.
 +
 +His wife (//this must refer to Rhoda Chidsey, but there doesn't seem to be
 +any record of their marriage, and Jr. was born while Sr. was married to
 +Esther Sands. I suppose it would have been impolite in the 19th century to
 +imply that a founding citizen, and respected businessman had been born to
 +his fathers' girlfriend//), accompanied by his son William, Jr., who was
 +born in New Haven, Conn. (//listed as Greenwich Ct. On other sites, but
 +actually East Haven would make more sense, since it's Rhoda's hometown, and
 +she was quite young//), moved then to Delaware County, where they were among
 +the first settlers. This son purchased a tract of heavily timbered land on
 +the south side of the west branch of the Delaware River, which included the
 +land now owned by the subject of this sketch. In these early days no
 +railroads or canals shortened the distances between towns and villages, and
 +the isolated pioneers subsisted chiefly on the products of their own land
 +and the deer and fish which were then abundant in the surrounding country.
 +William Seymour, Jr., (//then about 16 years old//) commenced at once on his
 +removal to his new home to clear his land and take his lumber by-means of
 +rafts down the river to Philadelphia, returning over the long route on foot.
 +December 16, 1803, he married Dorothy Lord, daughter of Eliphalet and Mary
 +(Green) Lord. She was born August, 28, 1788, and died January 28, 1866, the
 +mother of ten children, having lived to see the wilderness about her home
 +transformed into the seat of a prosperous, wealthy community.
 +
 +"**Alonzo Seymour** was brought up to the lumber business, assisting his
 +father in buying the standing lumber and rafting it down the river to
 +Philadelphia. Upon reaching his majority he purchased a tract of land in the
 +town of Tompkins, on which there was an improved water-power and saw-mill,
 +and has been since that time continuously engaged in the manufacture and
 +sale of lumber. He has also been greatly interested in farming, and in 1888
 +purchased the old homestead which he now occupies. In 1860 he married Miss
 +Josephine Bradbury, who became the mother of six children: Oakley A.; Irvin
 +W.; Ziba A.; John W.; June; and Kate, who died at the age of five years. And
 +they have also an adopted child, Belle.
 +
 +Politically, Mr. Seymour is a Republican, being a staunch supporter and
 +active worker of that party, and has held many offices of trust and
 +responsibility, among them being that of Supervisor, to which he was elected
 +in 1893 and re-elected in 1894. He has also held positions on various
 +committees, his long experience and natural business ability and well-known
 +integrity making his co-operation doubly valuable. Mr. and Mrs. Seymour are
 +both earnest, active members of the Baptist church, where they are
 +universally esteemed."
 +
 +//The following are also from the Delaware County Historical website, but
 +were written much earlier, evidently in the late 1800's or early 1900's
 +based on the use of the present tense while discussing George who was born
 +in 1848// [[http://www.dcnyhistory.org/books/brevie12.html]]
 +
 +**"**GEORGE S. SEYMOUR (//another gg uncle of mine as another grandson of
 +William, Jr//.) is a successful farmer in the town of Tompkins, N.Y., where
 +he was born October 7, 1848. His grandfather was William Seymour, who is
 +further mentioned in the biography of Alonzo Seymour elsewhere in this
 +volume. Charles D. Seymour, the father of George, was born in Tompkins,
 +April 26, 1823, and was brought up a farmer. He married Phoebe Walker,
 +daughter of John and Betsey Walker, residents of that part of Tompkins now
 +known as Deposit. George S. Seymour in his childhood was educated at the
 +district school, and worked on his father's farm, a part of which he
 +purchased from his father in 1880. On January 19, 1881, he married M. Eliza
 +McDonald, daughter of D. G. and Jane (Chambers) McDonald, of Walton. Mrs.
 +Seymour's paternal grandfather, Archibald McDonald, came to America from
 +Scotland, and settled in North Carolina, where he remained for thirteen
 +years, and then came-to; Delaware County, New York. He married Jennette
 +Smith, daughter of John Smith, of Walton. Their son, D. G. McDonald, was
 +born in North Carolina, and, when thirteen years of age, removed with his
 +parents to New York, where he was engaged in the lumber business and
 +agricultural pursuits. D.G. McDonald married Jane Chambers, who became the
 +mother of eight children, namely: Maria; Eliza, the wife of the subject of
 +this sketch; John; Archibald; Jennette; Jane and David, who were twins; and
 +Sloane. The family are Reformed Presbyterians, and still reside on the old
 +homestead. Mr. McDonald is a Republican in politics.
 +
 +Mrs. Seymour resided with her parents in Walton, teaching school in various
 +towns of Delaware County for five years. She is the mother of two children -
 +- David N. and Ethel N.; and both she and her husband are members of the
 +Presbyterian church. Politically, Mr. Seymour is a Republican, being a firm
 +supporter of the platform of that party; and his position as a man of
 +unquestionable integrity is manifested by the respect with which he is
 +regarded by all who know him.
 +
 +//I find it interesting that both the religious and political affiliations
 +are stressed in the biographies.  Also note that both were described as
 +being of the highest integrity, which is a trait that the Seymours have been
 +well known for, for many generations before and afterward, up to and
 +including, I hope, yours truly. Although my ex-wife would probably disagree,
 +I believe that others who know me would be in agreement. //
 +
 +//The following article was written by my GG Uncle Oakley Arlington Seymour
 +ca. 1934.  Note the rather high quality English for a guy in the Depression
 +in the middle of nowhere upstate NY.  Also imagine yourself floating down
 +the river through the wilderness, and arriving in the big city several days
 +later.  It must have been a nice break from the chopping and sawing and
 +loading, and I can only imagine what kind of time these guys had in Philly
 +with their pockets full of cash.....//:
 +
 +RAFTING IN THE CANNONSVILLE SECTION
 +
 +"I think that the first rafting that was done on this branch of the Delaware
 +was not later than the year 1810, as my great-grandfather, William Seymour,
 +had been here since the year 1800, and was one of the pioneer lumbermen of
 +the (west) branch. I do not know, nor do I know of any way to find out, who
 +ran the first raft (presumably of pine or hemlock logs) out of the branch.
 +William Seymour's son, Willet, was a lumberman all his life, having a water
 +power sawmill here at Cannonsville, and having one-half interest in another
 +one with Alonzo Seymour on Sands Creek. Willet did his rafting here at
 +Cannonsville but he and Alonzo rafted the product of the Sands Creek mill at
 +Hancock, but on this same branch of the Delaware. Between the two of them
 +they probably rafted several million feet of sawed lumber from these two
 +places, the most of it being hemlock.
 +
 +There were several other quite extensive lumbermen in the vicinity of
 +Cannonsville, among them Wilson Owens and his sons, Lewis and James; Nathan
 +Boyd and Sherman, Jerry and John Gregory, who operated at what was called in
 +those days, Carpenter's Eddy, but is now known as Granton. There was also a
 +family of Grants who lived at that place who were quite extensive lumbermen.
 +Also a father, brother and son by the names of Francis, Aarad and Clark
 +Frazier, who lumbered practically all their lives. They were also known as
 +"branch steersmen," as they used to steer down this branch as far as
 +Hancock, but no farther. In fact, there were very few men in these parts but
 +what did more or less lumbering, as it was generally a means of procuring a
 +little ready cash at least once a year.
 +
 +On Sands Creek, where I was born and raised, there were nine sawmills, run
 +by waterpower. All of them were up-and-down mills except one that was
 +originally of that class and later built over with a circular saw. These
 +mills all shipped their products, mostly Hemlock, by way of the West Branch,
 +to the Philadelphia market.
 +
 +**Sands Creek, a tributary of the West Branch, was named for Samuel Sands,
 +the owner of the largest mill on the creek, and one of the largest lumber
 +dealers in that whole territory, rafting his lumber at Hancock**, but I do
 +not know whether he confined his rafting operations to the West Branch or
 +whether he used both. The Crary Bros. also were quite big lumber dealers,
 +and they, also, had a mill at this place. Alonzo Seymour was one of the
 +largest lumbermen on the creek. I once heard him say that he figured that
 +over a million feet of lumber had been manufactured in his one small mill on
 +Sands Creek, and it was all rafted on the West Branch of the Delaware at
 +Hancock, just below the suspension bridge which goes over the river into
 +Pennsylvania. On the opposite side of the river from where he rafted I saw
 +in one spring what they claimed was a million feet of hemlock logs which
 +were rafted that spring.
 +
 +I am not posted at all on lumbermen anywhere above Rock Rift, although I
 +think that rafts have been run from as far up as Hamden, and possibly as far
 +as Delhi. But if they were they would have to have been very small,
 +especially in length. As near as I can remember, they used to be about 16 to
 +18 feet wide by 150 to 160 feet long. If a man had two of them, he would run
 +them out of the branch single, and lash the two together when they reached
 +the main river. It used to be quite an event for the boys here in the
 +village to go down the branch to Hancock and then walk back 11 miles by way
 +of Sands Creek.
 +
 +Another creek which contributed considerable traffic to the West Branch was
 +'Roods Creek,' several miles below Deposit, also another creek, whose name I
 +do not recall, which came into the West Branch from the Pennsylvania side at
 +Hales Eddy. I call to mind Begeal, Travis and Gardinier as quite prominent
 +lumbermen in that territory.
 +
 +The main timber rafted from this section was hemlock, mostly sawed into
 +scantling or joists, 3 inches thick, from 4 to 12 inches wide, and from 12
 +to 24 feet long. However, there was very little of the latter length. In the
 +later years of rafting considerable maple was cut and rafted to the
 +Philadelphia market. Raftsmen would put in a hemlock bottom and load the
 +maple on it. The maple was usually sawed into 2 inch planks. If there were
 +more than 60 or 70 thousand feet, it was usually made into two rafts. I have
 +heard of two hemlock rafts that counted out 180 thousand feet in
 +Philadelphia. Rafts from here were built from 16 to 20 feet wide; from 160
 +to 180 feet long, and had from two to five oars, according to the size of
 +the raft and the amount of water they would draw. I have heard of their
 +drawing a high as 33 inches of water. They used from 2 to 5 hands, according
 +to the size of the raft and whether it was double or single. I have heard of
 +one man running a light raft, which they called a "colt," clear through to
 +Trenton alone. I went down once, there being four of us on the raft, and we
 +had a very pleasant trip, reaching Trenton in four days.
 +
 +Some other names involved with rafting on the Delaware are: Daniel Skinner,
 +"Admiral of the Delaware," said to be the first man to raft logs down the
 +Delaware; Josiah Parks; Peter Swartwood Barnes; Oliver Tyler; George C.
 +Abraham; John B. Conklin; Elias Mitchell; Nathan Calkin; Benjamin; Daniel
 +and Stiles Chamberlain; Lyman Palmer; Daniel Alverson; A.J. Andrews; John
 +and Martin Love; George Grant; Jeremiah and Sherman Gregory; Huntington;
 +James Ostrom; James Lovelace; John Sprague; Sherman Sutton; Israel Gillette;
 +Henry and Steve Durfee; "Shep" Smith; James Hunt; Johannas Frazier; John B.
 +Kelsey; Caleb Kelsey; Alfred Beers; Jacob and Samuel A. Hathaway; Nathan
 +Dean; George L. Rood; Benaih G. Jayne; D.W., S.F. and J.O. Whitaker; David
 +Lord; J. Harrington Smith; Milton Whitaker; Stiles; Bridges; Barmer Hadley;
 +Henry Evans; George Peters; John M. Briggs, Sr.; George W. Briggs; Fletcher
 +Palmer; Palmer Boroughs; G. Halsey Bielby; Benjamin S. Boroughs; G. Mott
 +Briggs; Albert Boroughs; Edgar Webb; Moses Cole; George Huyck; Alexander;
 +David Lord; Bonnefond; Joshua Pine; MacLean; Weed; Ogden; Abraham and Judge
 +Isaac; Thomas and Jared Marvin; Isaac and William Townsend; Beers; Stockton;
 +Bennett Beardsley; Jeter Gardner; A.N. Wheeler; M. Case; Sylvester Brisack;
 +Joseph Combs; N.C. Thomas; George Marvin; John Launt; Ira Peake; Joseph and
 +J.B. Yentes; Eli and Alfred Gould; Hull and George Bradley; Nichols;
 +Wakeman; Graham; Cables; Buckbee; William Boucher; Elias Mitchell; Leander
 +S. Conklin; Boney Quillen."
  
book/willet8.1272843645.txt.gz · Last modified: 2010/05/02 18:40 by jims