[[133.allyn|(<-- 133. Allyn(6) Seymour)]] [[start|(Back to Start)]] [[135.ashbel|(135. Ashbel(6) Seymour -->)]]
====== 134. Charles Seymour ======
134. CHARLES6 SEYMOUR (//[[068.charles|Charles]]//5,
//[[021.timothy|Timothy]]//4, //[[008.John|John]]//3,
//[[003.John|John]]//2, //[[001.Richard|Richard]]//1),
born at West Hartford, Conn., 17 Jan. 1777, died at Hartford, Conn., 21 Jan.
1852; married at West Hartford, 20 Dec. 1803, CATHARINE6 PERKINS,
born at West Hartford, 20 Jan. 1782, died 19 Feb. 1848, daughter of Rev. Nathan5
//(Matthew4, Joseph3, Jacob2, John1)// and Catharine. (Pitkin).
He studied with Rev. Nathan Perkins until he was sixteen, when he became a clerk
in Hartford. He commenced business for himself when he came of age, and
continued a merchant in Hartford for more than fifty years. He held many
positions of trust and responsibility. He was treasurer of the First
Ecclesiastical Society from 1824 to 1843; one of the vice-presidents of the
oldest Savings Bank in Hartford, and chairman of the loaning committee for
thirty years; and Director of the American Asylum for Deaf Mutes for the same
term of years.
A fine miniature of him, artist unknown, in possession of the family, painted
shortly before his marriage, shows a man of fine features, dark hair, and a long
oval face, somewhat suggestive of his great-grandson and namesake, Charles
Seymour, President of Yale University.
Mrs. Seymour's father, Rev. NathanPerlcins; D.O., was for sixtysix years pastor
of the Church of Christjn West Hartford. Her mother was daughter of Rev. Timothy
Pitkin of Farmington, Conn., (a son of Gov. William Pitkin), whose wife was
Temperance Clap, daughter of Thomas Clap, President of Yale College.
The Seymour home was first on Dorr Street, and later the large brick house on
Pratt Street.
^ Children, born at Hartford: ^^^^^^
| | i. | JULIA7, b. 19 Dec. 1804; d. 17 Aug. 1886. ||||
| | ii. | CATHARINE, b. 25 May 1806; d. at Charleston, S.C., 3 Mar. 1884; m. at Hartford, 5 Dec. 1827, (MAJOR) CALVIN DAY, b. at Westfield, Mass., 26 Feb. 1803, d. 10 June 1884, s. of Ambrose and Polly (Ely). Children: ||||
| | | I. | Julia Seymour8, b. 7 July 1829; .m, 14 June 1854, (Col.) George Perkins Bissell. |||
| | | II. | Caroline Elizabeth, b. 19 Oct. 1833; unm., of Hartford. |||
| | | III. | John Calvin, b. 3 Nov. 1835; m. 17 June 1869, Alice Beecher Hooker. Children: |||
| | | | (1) | Katharine Seymour9, b. 8 May 1870; See below. ||
| | | | (2) | Alice Hooker, b. 3 Jan. 1872, d. in 1926; m. in 1910. Percy Jackson; see below. ||
| | | IV. | Katharine Perkins, b. 24 Feb. 1837, d. at Hartford, 25 Nov. 1914; m. at Hartford, 12 Oct. 1864, (Brig.-Gen.) Joseph Cooke Jackson, b. at Newark, N.J., 5 Aug. 1835. d. at New York City, 22 May 1913. Their two daughters were presented at the Court of St. James. Children: |||
| | | | (1) | Joseph Cooke9, b. 20 Aug. 1865, m. 14 June 1900, Mabel Goodsell, dau. of James Henry and Leila Angouleme (Peck). Child: ||
| | | | | A. | Joseph Hamilton10, b. 15 June 1901. |
| | | | (2) | John Day, b. 23 Sept. 1868; See below; m. at Elgin, Ill., 28 July 1909. Rose Marie Herrick. b. at Dundee, Ill., 25 Mar. 1888, dau. of John Wheeler and Annie Isabelle Elizabeth (Taylor) MacMillan. Children. b. at New Haven, Conn.: ||
| | | | | A. | Richard Seymour10, b. 30 Aug. 1910. |
| | | | | B. | John Herrick, b. 10 Jan. 1912, m. 20 June 1936. Mary R. Richardson. |
| | | | | C. | Henry Wolcott, b. 10 Oct. 1913; m. 6 Feb. 1936, Eleanor Wardlaw. |
| | | | | D. | Lionel Stewart, b. 25 June 1915; m. 16 June 1938 Patricia Woolley. |
| | | | | E. | Rose Day, b. 23 Aug. 1916; m. 16 May 1936, John W. Sheppard. |
| | | | | F. | Harriet (twin), b. 30 Setlt. 1917. |
| | | | | G. | Katharine (twin) b. 30 Sept. 1917. |
| | | | | H. | William Brinckerhhoff, b. 21 Mar. 1920. |
| | | | (3) | Katharine Seymour, m. 4 Dec. 1909, Percy Hamilton Goodsell, s. of James Henry and Leila Angouleme (Peck). Child: ||
| | | | | A. | Percy Hamilton10, b. 24 Sept. 1910. |
| | | | (4) | Elizabeth Huntington, m. 20 Oct. 1909, Martin Sheeler Watts, s. of James and Mary (Sheeler). Children: ||
| | | | | A. | Martin Seymour Huntington10, b. 26 Dec. 1910. |
| | | | | B. | Schuyler Wolcott Jacklon, b. 25 Jan. 1912. |
| | iii. | CHARLES, b. 2 Nov. 1807; d. at Hartford, 23 June 1886. ||||
| | iv. | EDWARD, b. 28 Sept. 1809; d. 12 Oct. 1810., ||||
| | v. | HARRIET, b. 27 Sept. 1811; d. at Brooklyn, Conn., 8 May 1846; m. at Hartford, Conn., 8 May 1844, REV. GEORGE JEFFREY TILLOTSON, b. at Farmington, Conn., 5 Feb. 1805, d; Apr. 1888, s. of Col. Daniel and Huldah (Gridley). He was graduated at Yale College, 1825, and at Yale Theological Seminary, 1830, and received the degree of M.A. in 1830. He had a charge at Brooklyn, Conn.; in 1849 was a member of the Yale Corporation, Only child d. in infancy. He m. (2) IS Nov. 1848, Elizabeth Kinsey Lester. ||||
| 237. | vi. | [[237.nathan_perkins|NATHAN PERKINS]], b. 24 Dec. 1813. ||||
| | vii. | JOHN WHITMAN, b. 24 Mar. 1816;d. at Villa de Santiago. Mexico, after 1857, unm.; was graduated from Yale College, 1837; a bank president. ||||
| | viii. | ALFRED (twin), b. 6 Nov. 1817; d. 11 Oct. 1818. ||||
| | ix. | ALBERT (twin), b. 6 Nov. 1817; d. 16 Sept. 1818. ||||
| | x. | MARY, b. 1 Nov. 1820; d. at Hartford, Conn., 18 Apr. 1883; m. at Hartford, 28 Oct. 1846, RUSSELL GOODRICH7 TALCOTT, b. at Hartford, 15 Aug. 1818, d. there 3 Mar. 1863, s. of Russell6 //(George5, Elizur4, Benjamin3, Samuel2, John1)// and Harriet (Kingsbury). Child: ||||
| | | I. | Mary KingsburyS, b. 3 Nov. 1847, d. 17 Nov. 1917. |||
| | xi. | EMILY, b. 28 July 1825; d. at Hartford, 16 Aug. 1904. ||||
Of the above children, Charles, Julia and Emily never married, and lived
together, at first on Pratt Street, and later in a large brick house on Collins
Street, Hartford. **JULIA7 SEYMOUR** (1804-1886) is recalled as a
woman of strong will and determination; she had a good mind, but became a
chronic invalid from arthritis, and at the last was blind.
**CHARLES7 SEYMOUR** (1807-1886) was a director in many banks and
corporations, and in 1843 was elected treasurer of the First Ecclesiastical
Society. A relative recalls his love of fast horses, and his long white hair
flying in the wind as he drove down Farmington Avenue. Sometimes he would slouch
along until some young blood with high-steppers would //try// to pass him.
**EMILY7 SEYMOUR** (1825-1904) is described as the gentler of the two
sisters, who led the typical, narrow life of "old maids" in those days. "Aunt
Emily" was a member of Center Church, Hartford, and interested in Bible study.
She learned Greek after she was sixty, in order to read the New Testament in the
original. She felt this to be an "unladylike" accomplishment, and made her
nephew, the Greek scholar, Thomas DayS Seymour, whose advice she sought, promise
that he would not reveal it until after her death. When a niece in childhood
visited the sisters, her doll was taken from her on Saturday night, and on
Sunday the little girl would walk back and forth in front of the sideboard on
which the doll lay, without daring to ask for it. "Aunt Emily" clung to strict
Sabbath observance, and when visited in old age by a grandniece, on Sunday would
hand her a religious book in place of the secular magazine she was reading.
The large brick house on Collins Street in which they lived was spacious and
dignified and eminently Victorian in its furnishings. The author remembers in
particular in the drawing room the large landscapes in leaf gold frames in the
taste of that day. Mr. John Day Jackson, a grand-nephew, recalls a statuette of
the three Graces, doubtless in Parian marble, judiciously veiled under a canopy
of lace simulating a tea-cozy. Mr. Jackson also recalls Thanksgiving dinners
which, following a traditional pattern, began with oyster soup in a huge tureen,
succeeded by roast turkey and cranberry sauce, an ample chicken pie and
attendant dishes which led up to a trinity of pies, the climax of the feast
being a service of green and China tea. The trinity of pies must have been
accompanied by the traditional Indian pudding, without which no old-fashioned
Thanksgiving dinner was complete.
**MARY KINGSBURY**8 TALCOTT (1847-1917) was widely known for her
genealogical knowledge of Connecticut families, particularly those of Hartford.
She was a founder, and for many years the Registrar, of the Ruth Wyllys Chapter,
D. A. R. For almost as long a period, she was Genealogist of the Connecticut
Society of Colonial Dames of America. She gave valuable aid in the work of
preserving the old stones in the ancient burial ground at Hartford, a work which
was vigorously prosecuted by her intimate friend, Mrs. Emily Seymour (Goodwin)
Holcombe.
From youth, she was keenly interested in her own ancestry; she joined the
Colonial Dames in right of John Talcott, Assistant and Treasurer of the Colony
of Connecticut, but filed supplemental claims in right of her "six Governors" --
William Bradford, Thomas Dudley, John Haynes, William Pitkin, John Webster, and
George Wyllys,six ministers,-Rev. Thomas Clap, D.D., Rev. Noadiah Russell, Rev.
Solomon Stoddard, Rev. John Warham, Rev. John Whiting, and Rev. Timothy
Woodbridge,-and also John Deming, Col. John Gorham, John Howland of the
//Mayflower,// Capt. Elizur Holyoke, Capt. Joseph Kingsbury, Capt. Richard
Osborne, Hon. William Pynchon, Lieut. Robert Seeley, Col. Elizur Talcott, Capt.
Samuel Talcott, Richard Treat the Patentee, and Hon. Samuel Wyllys,-a truly
amazing galaxy of early New England worthies.
One of Miss Talcott's most important pieces of work was her chapter on the
founders of Hartford in the Memorial History of Hartford Couflty (1886). She
edited the Kingsbury Genealogy (1905). She was frequently consulted by fellow
genealogists and historians. Her interest in the Seymour family, her mother's,
was so great that before 1880 she began the collection of data with the
intention of publishing a genealogy, an ambition which was never realized. Her
collections have, however, been utilized extensively in the present volume. Her
last paper, on Ruth Wyllys, was read at four o'clock one afternoon, and she died
at ten the same evening, "in harness," as she would have wished.
Handicapped from early life by serious deafness, Miss Talcott was nevertheless
very fond of music. She was a cultivated woman of many interests, wide reading,
and fondness for music and art. A friend wrote, "Her character was singularly
modest, brave, unselfish, and she fought a good fight for seventy years with
great fortitude and unfailing cheer." She was a member of the following
organizations: Arts and Crafts Club of Hartford, Civil Club, Daughters of the
American Revolution (Ruth Wyllys Chapter), Hartford Art Society, Hartford
Musical Club, Monday Afternoon Club, Colonial Dames of America, and Society of
Mayflower Descendants.
**KATHARINE SEYMOUR**9 DAY was born in Hartford, 8 May 1870, eldest
daughter of John Calvin and Alice Beecher (Hooker) Day; her father was only son
of Calvin Day, born in Westfield, Massachusetts, descended from Robert Day, one
of the Founders of Hartford in the company of the Rev. Thomas Hooker, and her
mother was the younger daughter of John Hooker (eighth in descent from the Rev.
Thomas Hooker) and Isabella Beecher Hooker, daughter of the Rev. Lyman Beecher
by his second wife (Harriet Porter of Portland, Maine) and half-sister of
Harriet Beecher Stowe and Henry Ward Beecher.
Miss Day and her sister Alice were taught by Miss Julia Burbank; she then
entered the Hartford High School for two years, leaving to go to Europe with her
family where they remained for seven years, traveling extensively, and where she
studied under various tutors. She and her sister were presented to the Kedievah
of Egypt, at the Court of the King and Queen of Wiirttemberg, and at the British
Court.
The family returned to Hartford and occupied for two years the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Clemens, Mark Twain, who were old friends of the Beecher and Hooker
families. Thereafter Miss Day's family moved to New York where she studied art
and became interested in social and civic problems, being a Vice-President of
the Women's Municipal League, since merged in the Citizens' Union. She continued
to travel extensively and exhibited in the Salons National and d'Autumn in 1910-12,
studying art for two years in Paris. Becoming more and more interested in
education; she graduated from Radcliffe College in 1921, taking her M.A. in
1922. She returned to Hartford in 1927, having bought the home of her great-
aunt, Harriet Beecher Stowe.
In Hartford she has been actively interested in historic and civic movements,
founding a civic society, the Friends of Hartford, which undertook saving the
Mark Twain home-now the Mark Twain Memorial, of which she is First Vice-
President, and promoted the formation of The Children's Museum, of which she is
a Trustee. She is also a founder and Deputy Governor of the Descendants of the
Founders of Hartford, a founder of the Civics Group of Hartford.
She has in her own home much material relating to Mrs. Stowe.
She is a member of the National Society of Colonial Dames, the Daughters of the
American Revolution, the Mayflower Society, New England Women, the Connecticut
Historical Society, the Connecticut Academy, the Town and County Club of
Hartford, the Cosmopolitan Club of New York, and the Women's City Club, Boston.
She is also an M.A. of Trinity College, Hartford.
**ALICE HOOKER**9 DAY, the younger daughter of John Calvin and Alice
Beecher (Hooker) Day, was born in Hartford, 3 Jan. 1872, and, like her sister,
also educated abroad, and graduated from Bryn Mawr College in 1902. In 1910 she
married Percy Jackson of New York City and thereafter lived in New York until
her death in 1926. She had an active part in all college work, was President of
the Bryn Mawr Club of New York, was New York Chairman of the Summer School of
Bryn Mawr College, and for years served on the Board of the New York League of
Women Voters and the Consumers' League of New York under Mrs. Frederick Nathan,
and succeeded Mrs. Nathan as president of the New York League. She was also
Secretaryof the National Consumers' League and a Director in the Citizens'
Union. She was intensely interested in labor problems, and made many trips to
Albany and Washington in the interejJt of better working conditions. She was a
woman of wide intellecttial pursuits and, spending many summers at her ranch in
New Mexico, became an expert in the archaeology of the Southwest and Central
America.
**JOHN DAY9 JACKSON** (1868-- ), born at Hartford, Conn., was graduated
from Yale College (A.B) in 1890, and studied at Harvard, the University of
Berlin, the Sorbonne, and École des Sciences Politiques. He was Washington
correspondent of the //New York Evening Post// and the //Newark// (N.J.)
//Evening News,// and was capitol representative of the //Washington Times,//
1893 to 1896. Since 1896 he has been connected with the //New Haven// (Conn.)
//Register,// as proprietor and editor since 1905. He is widely known for his
success in the newspaper field.
He served at one time as Police Commissioner of New Haven, and for four terms as
a member of the Board of Education. He is a Republican; and a Congregationalist.
He is a member of Societe de Legislation Civile Comparee (Paris), American
Society of Newspaper Editors, National Tax Association, Society of Colonial
Wars, Sons of the Revolution, Psi Upsilon, Chi Delta Theta, and Elihu Club.
His wife, Mrs. Rose Marie (Herrick) Jackson, is one of the most remarkable and
admired women of New Haven; she qualified as a Colonial Dame under Governor John
Webster of Connecticut, from whom she is descended through Colonel Ebenezer
Marsh of Litchfield, Conn., the Pitkins of Hartford, and the Lymans of
Northampton.
\\ [[133.allyn|(<-- 133. Allyn(6) Seymour)]] [[start|(Back to Start)]] [[135.ashbel|(135. Ashbel(6) Seymour -->)]]