Showing posts with label Charles Fithian. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Charles Fithian. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 9, 2012

Memorials of the North End | Part One

49 No. Main Street | 1833-1940 | Southampton | Abigail Fithian Halsey
by Lizbeth Halsey White

Paper read before a meeting of Southampton Colony Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution, on March 19, by Mrs. Edward (Lizbeth) P. White, 1929

In the earliest days of the village the triangle of land bounded by Main Street, Bowden Square and North Sea Road was common land, for some time after that on every side had been occupied.

Early in 1700 this was bought by Abner Howell, son of Col Josiah, who lived on he Bowden property. Abner Howell divided it between his two sons. To David he gave the south portion which included the plot where in the early 1840s Capt. Daniel Jagger built his home. This is now the home of Wm. L. Donnelly. To Phineas Howell was given the north portion of the Triangle. On the west half of his lot he built a tan-yard, which he afterwards sold to Ebenezer Jagger and removed from the village.

The Main Street part of the lot was purchased in 1788 by Annanias Halsey, whose son Urah lived across the street in the Wilman Halsey house and whose daughter, Susan, lived to very old age in the little house which stood on the front of the lot now owned by Abigail Halsey. This house and also the Nancy Sayre house is now in Tuckahoe.

On the Seven Ponds road to the Water Mill, on the edge of the Piggery Golf Links, is a very charming little old house which about the year 1800 stood beside the mill stream just opposite to the old Water Mill. Into it came a young bride Phebe Rogers and her husband Charles Fithian Halsey. They purchased a farm and he was miller in the windmill, (still standing) not far from their home. Three boys and three girls came to them and the father died. Desiring to give her boys a trade Phebe sold the farm and moved her family to New York City—then a three-days journey by stage-coach. She apprenticed the boys for four years to learn the mason’s trade. At that time (1820) New York City had begun its phenomenal growth, thought it was still a country village as compared with the city of today. Wall and Canal Streets were being built up, and Greenwich Village was a residential suburb.

There in Grove Street in 1827 the youthful masons built a home for their family use, and when Henry, the eldest son, returned to Water Mill for his bride, it was in the Grove Street house that they made their first home. But eastern Long Island beckoned and the family returned.

“Capt. Harry” Halsey in 1831 bought the plot on the triangle owned by Annanias Halsey and built his home thereon. The house in Grove Street is still standing and the wooden mantels and paneled and reeded casings of doors and windows were exactly copied in the little parlor of their home in the North End. In a room, now a part of the kitchen, “Miss Amanda” kept her Dame school and there are a few still with us who remember her as their first teacher. Opening out from the school room was a dark stairway where her pupils were banished by way of punishment. While she was having recitations they would pull off their shoes and steal to the kitchen chamber above and have no end of fun, as children do, when they can find an attic to play in.

“Miss Amanda” loved poetry and flowers and the perennials she planted still bloom in the little old garden. Some of her punishments, after she had tried them out on herself, she abandoned. A big pewter horn hung high in its place on the wall and nothing was allowed to break the routine of the little schoolroom except when a whale-rally was on at the beach and “Capt. Harry,” without ceremony, rushed in for the horn that he might do his part in passing the signal which meant “Whale off shore! All hands to the beach!”

Both of Capt. Harry’s brothers became whaling captains but he bought a farm and worked on at his mason’s trade. His title of “Captain” came to him as wrecking master. Before the Life-Saving Service was established (1876) and nearly all ships were sailing vessels, wrecks along the shore were not infrequent and the wrecking crews were a necessary and important organization.

For so many years when Sag Harbor was a prominent whaling port and her harbor was busy with ships it became the Mecca of every man, and especially of every boy, to go to the Harbor and see the ships.

Capt. Harry Halsey, when a boy of twelve years, had been permitted to pay a visit to his cousins living there. A ship came in bringing the news of the signing of the Peace between England and the United States, after the War of 1812-14. His first impulse was to carry home the good news as quickly as possible. So, in his boyish enthusiasm, he ran all the way to this home crying “Peace! Peace!” and this is the way the news was brought to Water Mill. The boy had been named for his great-uncle Henry Halsey who was Capt. of a Privateer during the Revolution and who lost his life in the Battle of Groton Heights. His name with other patriots who fell at that time is engraved on the monument there. He with his brother Jesse, after hearing the news of the Battle of Lexington, rowed across Long Island Sound in a row-boat and enlisted in the Continental Army. Jesse Halsey served throughout the war and won the rank of Captain.

In the April number of the Scribner’s magazine (1929) is an article written by Thomas Boyd entitled, “How Mad Was Anthony Wayne?” The article describes the evacuation of the City of Philadelphia by the British Forces and the Battle of Monmouth Court-house. The incident described on page 436 verifies a tradition cherished by the numerous descendants of Jesse Halsey, the Patriot, who at the time was near Gen. Washington and heard his reprimand of Gen. Charles Lee for his disobedience of orders and his cowardly retreat. He felt the reprimand, though severe, was just and well deserved.

He told also of the severe heat of that eventful day and said that more men die from the intense heat than from the guns. This favored the Americans for though many had frozen in their homespun garments during the previous severe winter at Valley Forge, on this hottest of July days the homespun-clad army had the advantage over the enemy. In their heavy and much-decorated cloth uniforms.

Capt. Jesse Halsey, brother of Capt. Harry, built the house which is now the home of Dr. David Hallock. The sister, Elizabeth, married Capt. William Fowler and settled just north of the Burying Ground. Her husband was a whaling Captain and he also spent several years in California during the gold-rush. Three of their sons went on whaling voyages and never returned. Dear Aunt Libbie Fowler! Who never heard the click of the gate without a throb! She had an overwhelming sympathy for others in time of need. In sorrow and in illness she became the neighborhood mother, and there are many who remember her for her kindly deeds.

To return to the Triangle, the southern half of which had been given to David Howell. It was he who about 1750 built the well-preserved old house which long since became the home of the Herricks. David Howell was a silversmith and just when he left Southampton we have no record. It is certain that his house was occupied by the British officers during the Revolution, and it is safe to assume that he was one of the many refugees to Conn. So many of the homes of the villagers changed ownership after the Revolution. This, in 1772, was purchased by Col. Josiah Smith of Moriches for his daughter, Hannah, who had married Elias Pelletreau. He was a merchant and the store which he built remained for many years attached to the house on the south. His wife, Hannah, was very deaf, caused by the effects of cold and exposure when endeavoring to relieve her father who for some time was imprisoned by the enemy in the Provost Prison in New York City.

She made very possible effort to relieve his distress, for imagination would fail to reveal the miseries of an enemy prison during those bitter years.

Courtesy Lizbeth Halsey White Files, Southampton Historical Museum Archives and Research Center 

Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Halsey Genealogical Record


After the news of the Battle of Lexington had reached Long Island, Jesse Halsey (1739-1818) and his brother, Elias Henry, with three others rowed across Long Island Sound in a row boat and joined the Continental Army.

They signed the Articles of Association in May 1775, both Elias Henry and Jesse won the rank of captain in the Revolution. Both Jesse and Elias Henry were lieutenants in Colonel David Mulford's regiment. Elias Henry became a captain of a privateer in the harbor of New London. He was killed in the Battle of Groton Heights on September 6, 1781.

Another brother,
David Fithian, was also a captain in the Revolution and died in 1790.

Captain Jesse Halsey was also a lieutenant on Col. Mulford’s Reg’t. p. 1055, 993 (see Mather’s Refugees), received commission Sept. 29, 1775.

See Calendar of Historical Mss Vol. 1, p. 120. Also, New York in the Revolution, p. 169-172.

Captain Jesse fought in the Battle of Monmouth and heard the famous reprimand given by George Washington to General Charles Lee when the later had ordered retreat of the regiment he was leading. The claim has often been made, in the effort to make Washington something more than a human, that he did not use profanity at this time. Captain Jesse said that the most forceful language was used by Gen. Washington at this time and that his indignation was righteous and well timed. Captain Jesse lived to be 79 years old and walked with a crutch the remainder of his life.

He had eight children, seven of whom were born previous to 1776 and the youngest child, Abigail (Ludlow), was born after the Revolution. Six girls and one boy, Charles Fithian, lived to grow up, marry, and have families. Captain Jesse and his wife, Charity White, are buried in the Watermill Cemetery. It was discovered that no stones remained to mark their graves. Seventy-five descendants, paying one dollar each, contributed to the fund, which marks their final resting place. They secured a government stone for Captain Jesse and had one made like it for Charity, and placed a fund with the cemetery association which gives them perpetual care. The fund also provided a D.A.R. marker for Capt. Jesse.

GENEALOGICAL RECORD NO. I 
THOMAS HALSEY I to REVEREND JESSE HALSEY

Thomas (I)                  B. Jan. 2 1592; In Great Gaddesden, Hertfordshire, Eng.
                                    D. Aug. 27, 1678; Came to Mass. 1637. Southampton 1640.
                                    M. (I) Phebe____ 1627 in England
                                    Murdered by Pequot Indian 1649
                                    (II) Ann, widow Edward Johnes
                                    Chn: Thomas, Daniel, Isaac, Elizabeth

Daniel (II)                   B. 1630 (“Goodman Halsey of Wickapoqu3”)
                                    D. 1682
                                    M. Jemima dau. Richard Woodhull

Daniel (III)                  B. Aug. 31, 1669; Wickapogue
                                    D. Feb. 28, 1734
                                    M. Amy Larison

Henry (IV)                  B. Wickapogue, Feb. 28, 1700; Lived in Scuttlehole.
                                    D. 1740
                                    M. Sarah, dau. David Fithian, of East Hampton
                                    Chn:

Jesse (V)                     B. May 18, 1739; Capt. Revolutionary War
                                    D. 1818, Watermill
                                    M. Jan. 14, 1761; Charity, dau. Charles (1716-1791) and Sarah Howell White
                                                            B. 1741            
                                                            D. 1816            

Charles Fithian (VI)    B. Feb. 11, 1771; Scuttle Hole. Bridgehampton
(Miller)                        D. Oct. 25, 1814
                                    M. Phebe, dau. Capt. Wm Rogers Hayground. 1802
                                    B. May 14, 1778
                                    D. Oct. 13, 1839
                                    Chn. Henry, Jesse, Edward, Mary, Hannah

Henry (VII)                 B. Watermill (miller), Aug. 19, 1803
(Capt. Henry)              D. April 11, 1880; Southampton, L.I.
                                    M. Jan. 21, 1828; Eliza, dau. Barzillai and Frances Howell Halsey

Charles Henry (VIII)  B. Oct. 10, 1830; New York City
                                    D. Aug. 9, 1906; Southampton
                                    M. Melvina Dunwreath, dau. Thomas and Phebe Hudson Terry
                                                B. June 5, 1842
                                                D. June 2, 1887

Jesse (Rev.) (IX)         B. May 3, 1882
Cincinnati, Ohio         D.
                                    M. Helen Haynes dau. Robert and ­­­____ Haines Isham, Lake Placid, NY
                                    [Ed note: Frederick and Laura]
                                    B. May 18, 1889
                                    Chn.
Charles Henry, B. April 6, 1911, St. Anthony, Newfoundland
                                           Frederick Isham, B. Aug. 22, 1912, St. Anthony, Newfoundland
                                           Helen Augusta, B. Feb. 8, 1914, Cincinnati
                                           Wilmun Haines, B. Sept. 30, 1920, Cincinnati; D. May 20, 1928, Cincinnati
[ed note: text says Wilman, but inscription to Living A Living Hope: Suggestions for Funeral Services. Halsey, Jesse. Confirms it Wilmun]
                                           Abigail Fithian, B. Aug. 9, 1922, Southampton, L.I.

GENEALOGICAL RECORD No. II
THOMAS HALSEY I through his son Tomas to REVEREND JESSE HALSEY No. 1

Thomas (I)                  B. Jan. 2 1592; In Great Gaddesden, Hertfordshire, Eng.
                                    D. Aug. 27, 1678; Came to Mass. 1637. Southampton 1640.
                                    M. (I) Phebe____ 1627 in England
                                    Murdered by Pequot Indian 1649
                                    (II) Ann, widow Edward Johnes
                                    Chn. Thomas, Daniel, Isaac, Elizabeth

Thomas (II)                 B. 1627
                                    D. 1699
                                    M. Mary B. ____ D. Dec. 20, 1699
                                    Chn.

Josiah (III)                  B. Feb. 15, 1656
                                    D. 1732; buried Flying Point Cemetery
                                    M. I. Sarah Topping, Sept. 12, 1678
                                    M. II. Mary
                                    Chn.

Deacon Josiah (IV)     B. 1692
                                    D. 1744; buried Flying Point Cemetery
                                    M.
                                    Chn.    
           
Israel (V)                     B. ____ Watermill
                                    D. Nov. 19, 1774
                                    M. Mary, dau. Joshua Halsey and Martha Wilmun

Wilmun (VI)               B. Aug. 2, 1749
                                    D. 1785
                                    M. Ruth Rogers, March 9, 1773; B. May, 25, 1751  D. Jan. 19, 1815
                                    Chn. Susanna Jane, Barzillai, Sylvanus, Wilmun

Barzillai (VII)             B. 1776
                                    D. Feb. 25, 1849
                                    M. Frances, dau. Capt. David and Mehetable Halsey Howell; Nov. 2, 1799
                                    Chn.
Enoch, B. 1801
Amanda M. Stephen Rose; Elmira

Eliza (VIII)                 M. Henry Halsey

GENEALOGICAL RECORD No. II
THOMAS HALSEY I through his son Isaac to REVEREND JESSE HALSEY

Thomas (I)                   B. Jan. 2 1592; In Great Gaddesden, Hertfordshire, Eng.
                                    D. Aug. 27, 1678; Came to Mass. 1637. Southampton 1640.
                                    M. (I) Phebe____ 1627 in England
                                    Murdered by Pequot Indian 1649
                                    (II) Ann, widow Edward Johnes
                                            Chn. Thomas, Daniel, Isaac, Elizabeth wife of Richard Howell

Isaac (II)                      B.
                                    D. About 1703
                                    M. Mary
                                    Chn.
Isaac B. 1665 D. March 23, 17__
                                           Joseph B. 1668 D. April 17, 1725; Elizabeth, N.J.
                                           Joshua
                                           Mary, Samuel, Elizabeth, Thomas

Joshua (III)                  B. 1675
                                    D. 1734
                                    M. Martha, dau. Isaac Wilmun
                                    Chn.
Abigail M. John Post
Experience M. Nathaniel Halsey
Irene M. Wm. Foster
Mary M. Israel Halsey
Martha M. Joshua Sayre
Prudence M. David Woodruff

Mary (IV)                   Dau. Joshua Halsey and Martha Wilmun
                                    B. before 1744
                                    D. Aug. 24, 1782
                                    M. Israel Halsey, son of Joshua and Martha Wilmun Halsey

Wilmun (V)                 B. 1747
                                    D. Jan. 15, 1786
                                    M. Ruth Rogers
                                    Chn. (For continuation record see No. II)

All dates taken from genealogical records Howell History, Early Southampton and family record of Charles Henry Halsey, 1830-1906; Compiled by Lizbeth Halsey White, Southampton, L.I. N.Y. April 1932.

Wednesday, February 9, 2011

William De Normandie

William De Normandie
b:14 Oct 1024; Falaise, Calvados, Basse-Norma
d: 09 Sep 1087;
Hermentrube, near Rouen, Franc

son: King of England Henry I
b: 1070; Selby, Yorkshire, England
d: 01 Dec 1135; St Denis, Cher, Centre, France

granddaughter 1. Empress Matilda Of England
b: 05 Aug 1102; London, Middlesex, , England
d: 10 Sep 1167' Rouen, Seine-Maritime, Haute-N

grandson 2. King of England Henry II
b: 25 Mar 1133; Le Mans, Sarthe, Pays de la Loir
d: 06 Jul 1189; Chinon, Indre-et-Loire, Centre, Fr

3. King of England John
b: 24 Dec 1167; Kings Manor House, Oxford, Engl
d: 12 Oct 1216

4. King of England Henry III
b: 01 Oct 1207, Winchester
d: 16 Nov 1272, Westminster

5. Earl of Lancaster Etc Edmund Planb: 16 Jan 1245
d: 05 Jun 1295

6. Earl of Lancaster Henry Plantagen
b: 1281, London, England
d: 22 Sep 1345, Bayonne, Normandy

7. Lady Eleanor Plantagenet
b: Bet. 1302–1328
d: 11 Jan 1372

8. Alice Fitzalan De Arundel
b: Bet. 1327–1355d: Bet. 1362–1437

9. Eleanor De Holland
b: 1373; Upholland, Lancashire, England
d: Bet. 1409–1468

10. Alice De Montacute
b: Bet. 1345–1427
d: Bet. 1376–1504

11. Alice De Neville
b: Abt. 1430; Salisbury, Wiltshire, England
d: Bet. 1408–1515

12. Elizabeth Fitz Hugh, Baroness Vau
b: 1451; Ravensworth, Yorkshire, Englandd: 28 Feb 1513; Harrowden, Northamptonshire, Englad

13. William Parr
b: 1480, Kendal Castle, Westmoreland
d: 10 Sep 1546, Horton, Northamptonshire, England

14. Elizabeth Parr
b: 1499, Kendal, Westmorland, England
d: 05 May 1531, Thenford, Northamptonshire, England

15. Fulke Woodhull
b: 1530, Thenford Manor, Northamptonshire
d: 25 Nov 1613, Thenford Manor, Northamptonshire

16. Lawrence Woodhull
b: Bet. 1569–1598, Thenford Manor, England
d: Bet. 1623–1683

17. Richard Woodhull
b: 13 Sep 1620, Theuford, Northampton, England
d: 17 Oct 1691, Setauket, Town of Brookhaven, L

18. Jemima Woodhull
b: Abt. 1646, Southampton, Suffolk, New York
d: Unknown, Suffolk, Long Island, New York

19. Daniel Halsey
b: 31 Aug 1669, Southampton, Suffolk, New York
d: 28 Feb 1734, Southampton, Suffolk, New York

20. Henry Halsey
b: 28 Feb 1700, Wickapogue NY
d: 1740

21. Jesse Halsey
b: 18 May 1739, Southampton, Suffolk, New York,
d: 1818, 21st great grandson

22. b: Charles Fithian Halsey
d: 25 Oct 1814, Southampton, Suffolk, New York
11 Feb 1771, Southampton, Suffolk, New York

23. Henry Halsey
b: 19 Aug 1803, Southampton, Suffolk, New York
d: 11 Apr 1880, Southampton, Suffolk, New York

24. Charles Henry Halsey
b: 10 Oct 1830, New York, New York
d: 09 Aug 1906, Southampton, Suffolk, New York

25. Jesse Halsey
b: 03 May 1882, Southampton, Suffolk, New York
d: 12 Jan 1954, Southampton, Suffolk, New York

26. Charles Henry Halsey
b: 16 Apr 1911, Newfoundland and Labrador, CA
d: 07 Aug 1993, Southampton, Suffolk, New York

[Ed note: record courteous genealogist Con Crowley.]

Thursday, January 14, 2010

Daughters of the American Revolution

-by Rev. Jesse Halsey, transcribed by Dr. Samuel G. Warr

After the news of the Battle of Lexington had reached Long Island, Jesse Halsey (1739-1818) and his brother, Elias Henry, with three others rowed across Long Island Sound in a row boat and joined the Continental Army.

They signed the Articles of Association in May 1775, both Elias Henry and Jesse won the rank of captain in the Revolution. Both Jesse and Elias Henry were in Colonel David Mulford's regiment. Elias Henry became a captain of a privateer in the harbor of New London. He was killed in the Battle of Groton Heights on September 6, 1781.

Another brother, David Fithian, was also a captain in the Revolution and died in 1790.

Captain Jesse fought in the Battle of Monmouth and heard the famous reprimand given by George Washington to General Charles Lee when the later had ordered retreat of the regiment he was leading. The claim has often been made, in the effort to make Washington something more than a human, that he did not use profanity at this time. Captain Jesse said that his indignation was righteous and well timed. Captain Jesse lived to be 79 years old and walked with a crutch the remainder of his life.

He had eight children, seven of whom were born previous to 1776 and the youngest child, Abigail (Ludlow), was born after the Revolution. Six girls and one boy, Charles Fithian, lived to grow up, marry, and have families. Captain Jesse and his wife, Charity White, are buried in the Watermill Cemetery. It was discovered that no stones remained to mark their graves. Seventy-five descendants, paying one dollar each, contributed to the fund, which marks their final resting place. They secured a government stone for Captain Jesse and had one made like it for Charity, and placed a fund with the cemetery association which gives them perpetual care. The fund also provided a D.A.R. marker for Captain Jesse.

Friday, August 14, 2009

The House at 88 Grove Street

This house in the West Village was built in 1827, by my Great-Great-Great Grandfather Henry Halsey, a mason, and his brothers Jesse and Edward.

According to a letter written by my Great-Great Aunt Babbie in 1936 to the then owner of 88 Grove Street, Henry's father, Charles Fithian Halsey, had died in 1814 and his mother, Phoebe Rogers (daughter of Capt. William Rogers of Bridgehampton), "unable to give her boys a college education although she owned much land here, [left Watermill and] took them to New York and apprenticed them to a master mason. They built 88 Grove Street for themselves, buying Lot No. 52 from Thomas R. Mercein at the time, I think, when Greenwich Village was taken into the city. Henry brought his bride [Eliza Halsey] there, and his mother, brothers and two sisters [Elizabeth and Mary] lived on one floor, he and his wife on the other."

Aunt Babbie goes on to say that her father, my Great-Great Grandfather--the first Charles Henry Halsey--was born in the Grove Street home in 1830, as were his siblings Amanda in 1833, Wilman in 1836, Mary in 1839. A third son, Jesse, was born in Southampton in 1845. In an interview I conducted in December 2005, Aunt Abigail, however, contended that 49 North Main was built in 1832 and Amanda was the first child born in that home.

(A note on the progression of Jesse Halseys.)

In 1843, Jesse and Edward Halsey would become whaling captains and go to sea, while Henry (known as Capt. Harry of North End) would return with Eliza and their children to Southampton in 1832 and build the family home on North Main, employing many of the same architectural devices (including interior cornices and trim) that are found in the house at 88 Grove Street.

After the Halseys had returned to Long Island, the house at 88 Grove Street played a notable role in the history of 20th century social change.

In 1902, 88 Grove Street was owned by Ferruccio Vitale, a landscape architect, and rented to 5 staff members of the nearby Greenwich House settlement, serving as the colony's men's annex. The 5 residents were deemed "only the first among many well-to-do social progressives to occupy either 88 or 90 Grove Street over the next decade."

In 1903, former headworker of the University Settlement Robert Hunter and his wife, Caroline Stokes, moved in. They purchased the home in 1907. The house next door, No. 90, was purchased by Caroline's unmarried sister, the painter and social activist Helen Stokes, and let to various friends in her upper-middle-class socially progressive circle.

Starting in 1907, Grove Street housed various members of the A Club, a "more or less radical" writers' collective and "residential community in which gender roles did not divide along the conventional lines of men doing the 'real' work and women taking care of the the kids, meals, and the laundry." A Club member, social reformer, novelist, and journalist Ernest Poole took up residence in the house for a year, along with his family. In 1910, following the death of her first husband, another A Clubber--suffragist, writer, labor activist, witness to the Triangle Shirtwaist fire, and single mother of three who was written out of her own wealthy mother's will for her bohemian ways--Mary Heaton Vorse moved into the home with her aged father and small children.

In 1915, Helen Stokes's brother, James Graham Phelps Stokes, bought 88 Grove Street and moved in with his wife. J.G., and sisters Harriet and Caroline, were the scions of New York merchant and banker Anson Phelps Stokes. After a short but successful stint with the railroads, J.G. made headlines in 1902 when he left his parents' Madison Avenue mansion to become a settlement worker in the East Village. A frequent name on the city's Socialist ticket, Stokes would make headlines again in 1905, when we became engaged to Rose Harriet Pastor, "a young Jewess, who until two weeks ago was a special writer on The Jewish Daily News, and prior to that worked in a Cleveland cigar factory."

Quite the rabble-rouser, Rose Stokes would garner significant press attention for her presence at the 1918 trial of Eugene Debs and, according to the New York Times: "While the Stokeses lived at 88 Grove Rose Stokes risked arrest by passing out birth-control literature at Carnegie Hall in 1916 and was convicted in 1918 of Federal espionage charges for antiwar statements, although her 10-year sentence was set aside." The charges ultimately would be dropped, but on the night of November 3, 1918, police raided 88 Grove Street and arrested Rose for registering to vote in New York while under bail in Kansas for seditious utterances.