Elisha Sacket

FatherAugustus Sacket (1769-1827)
MotherMinerva Camp (1780-1837)
Birth26 December 1797, New York StateG,1
Death1
Elisha Sacket, son of Augustus Sacket and Minerva Camp, was born, presumably in New York StateG, on 26 December 1797.1 He died in infancy.1

 Notes & Citations

  1. Charles Weygant, The Sacketts of America, "779. Elisha Sacket, b. Dec. 26, 1797, d. in infancy."
Sackett line6th great-grandson of Thomas Sackett the elder of St Peter in Thanet
4th great-grandson of Simon Sackett the colonist
ChartsLine 3a (American)
Generation.Tree7O.3
Last Edited9 Jan 2024

Augustus H Sacket

FatherAugustus Sacket (1769-1827)
MotherMinerva Camp (1780-1837)
Birth14 June 1800, New York StateG,1
Death20 January 1860, Bloomfield, Hartford County, ConnecticutG,1,2
Augustus H Sacket, son of Augustus Sacket and Minerva Camp, was born, presumably in New York StateG, on 14 June 1800.1 He died aged 59 in Bloomfield, Hartford County, ConnecticutG, on 20 January 1860.1,2 He was unmarried.
     Augustus was a student at Hamilton College, Clinton, Oneida County, New York StateG, in 1816.3
     In 1850 Augustus was living in BloomfieldG in the household of Martin Burr, a farmer, and was recorded in the census as Augustus Sacket, a laborer, aged 50 and born in Connecticut [but more likely born in New York]. He was described as insane.4

 Notes & Citations

  1. Charles Weygant, The Sacketts of America, "780. Augustus H. Sacket, b. June 14, 1800, d. Jan. 20, 1860, unmarried."
  2. "Connecticut, Church Record Abstracts, 1630–1920" (Ancestry image), Bloomfield, Congregational, "Sackett, Augustus, d. 20 Jan 1860, æ 59. 4:12."
  3. "U.S., College Student Lists, 1763-1924" (Ancestry image), Triennial catalogue of the Union Society of Hamilton College; Clinton, October 1835 (Hamilton College, 1835), "1816, Augustus H Sackett."
  4. 1850 United States Federal Census, Roll M432_39, p. 282
    Bloomfield, Hartford, Connecticut
    Sacket, Augustus, 50, laborer, b. CT, insane.
    [In household of Martin Burr, 40, farmer]
Sackett line6th great-grandson of Thomas Sackett the elder of St Peter in Thanet
4th great-grandson of Simon Sackett the colonist
ChartsLine 3a (American)
Generation.Tree7O.3
Last Edited9 Jan 2024

Elisha C Sacket

FatherAugustus Sacket (1769-1827)
MotherMinerva Camp (1780-1837)
Birth29 October 1802, New York StateG,1
Death3 February 18511
Elisha C Sacket, of Sacket's Harbor, New York, son of Augustus Sacket and Minerva Camp, was born, presumably in New York StateG, on 29 October 1802.1 He died aged 48 on 3 February 18511 and was buried at Lakeside Cemetery, Sacket's HarborG.2
     In 1850 Elisha was living in Hounsfield, Jefferson County, New York StateG, in the household of his brother Edward and sister-in-law Cornelia, and was recorded in the census as Elisha C Sackett, a merchant, aged 51 [actually 47] and born in New York.3
Elisha C Sacket (1802–1851), Lakeside Cemetery, Sacket's Harbor, New York
(Src: Find a Grave, Treva Poe)

781. Elisha C. Sacket, 1802–1851, of Sacketts Harbor, N. Y., was for many years an invalid and great sufferer. The old family Bible contains the following entry:
"Elisha C. Sacket, son of Augustus and Minerva Sacket, died Feb. 3, 1851, aged 48 years, of spinal affection, after a confinement to his bed of twelve years and six months."

 Notes & Citations

  1. Charles Weygant, The Sacketts of America, "781. Elisha C. Sacket, b. Oct. 29, 1802, d. Feb. 3, 1851."
  2. Find a Grave.
  3. 1850 United States Federal Census, Roll M432_514, p. 163
    Hounsfield, Jefferson, New York
    Sackett, Edward, 44, merchant, b. NY
    Sackett, Cornelia C, 29, b. NY
    Sackett, Hobart S, 6, b. NY
    Sackett, George B, 1, b. NY
    Bryant, Mary, 23, b. NY
    Warden, Sally, 30, b. NY
    Sackett, Elisha C, 51, merchant, b. NY.
Sackett line6th great-grandson of Thomas Sackett the elder of St Peter in Thanet
4th great-grandson of Simon Sackett the colonist
ChartsLine 3a (American)
Generation.Tree7O.3
Last Edited9 Jan 2024

Minerva Kezia Sacket

FatherAugustus Sacket (1769-1827)
MotherMinerva Camp (1780-1837)
Birth12 April 1804, New York StateG,1,2
Death1 August 1851, North CarolinaG,1
Marriage4 June 1822, Rutherford County, North CarolinaGSamuel Greenlee1,3,4
Minerva Kezia Sacket
(1804–1851)
(Src: Find a Grave, Pythonyssa SoothSayer)
Minerva Kezia Sacket, daughter of Augustus Sacket and Minerva Camp, was born in New York StateG on 12 April 1804.1,2 She died aged 47 in North CarolinaG on 1 August 18511 and was buried at the First Presbyterian Church Cemetery, Morganton, Burke County, North CarolinaG.5,6 She married in Rutherford County, North CarolinaG, on 4 June 1822, Samuel Greenlee, son of James Ephraim Greenlee and Mary Mitchell.1,3,4 Samuel was born in Burke County, North CarolinaG, on 26 January 1783.5 He died aged 65 in MorgantonG on 23 May 1848 and was buried at the First Presbyterian Church Cemetery, MorgantonG.5,7
     In 1850 Minerva was living in MorgantonG and was recorded in the census as Minerva K Greenlee, aged 44 and born in New York. Living with her were her children, Samuel, 22, Emily, 21, Elizabeth, 17, Alexander, 15, and George, 13. Minerva owned real estate valued at $12,000 and each of her children owned real estate valued at $4,500. The family also owned 22 slaves, ten of whom, five males aged from four months to 38 years and five females aged from five to 60, were assigned to Minerva. Samuel owned eight slaves, Emily one, Ephraim one, and Alexander two.8,9
     The administrator of Minerva's estate drew up an inventory of items of personal estate sold on 8, 9, and 10 December 1851 on 12 months' credit. Sale proceeds totalled $5,492, and included the sale of slaves: negro boy Bob $690, negro boy Adam, wife and child $1,215, negro boy George $501, negro woman Leah and child $653, girl Laurah $290, girl Narcissa $705, and boy Harris $100.
     Minerva's husband Samuel had died intestate three years earlier. At the time of Minerva's death, a committee formed after Samuel's death was still evaluating his estate. The committee reported on 17 July 1851 that $33,673 had been collected from debtors and $11,155 paid to creditors, leaving a balance of $22,518 in the hands of the administrators of his estate.
     Among the papers concerning Samuel's estate is a numbered list of his 59 slaves. In respectful recognition of their part in the history of the Sackett family, the list is reproduced below, together with the administrators' further explanatory comments.
Numbered list of Samuel Greenlee's slaves, with their ages

"The following negroes brought from the State of Tennesee by the Administrators and surrendered by them to the Distributees & heirs at law of Saml Greenlee dec'd, to wit
1. Bob 67; 2. Lill 60; 3. Andy 45; 4. Ben 42; 5. Saml 40; 6. Washington 45; 7. Unasine 28; 8. Jone 18; 9. George 17; 10. Perry 11; 11. Jennette 40; 12. Cinette 34; 13. Mira 21; 14. Polly 40; 15. Jenny 22; 16. Roxanna 17; 18. Charity 13; 19. Vicey 12; 20. Harriet 7; 21. Hannah 5; 22. Andrew 3; 23. Jane 2; 24. Martha 3; 25. Caroline 1; 26. Adam 40; 27. Matilda 25; 28. Rachael 80; 29. Maria 14; 30. George 30; 31. Sophia 30; 32. Harriet 3; 33. Sarah 5; 34. Geo Alexr 6 months; 35. Harris 50; 36. Hiram 28; 37. Israel 15; 38. Henderson 11; 39. Caroline 20; 40. Lena 17; 41. Jeff 40; 42. Mary 10; 43. Hannah 6; 44. Jim 26; 45. John 29; 46. Rebecca 60; 47. Letitia 22; 48. Sidney 18; 49. Jacob 35; 50. Narcissa 7; 51. Clara 43; 52. Austin 18; 53. Martha 16; 54. Lucretia 9; 55. Francis 7; 56. Wesley 5; 57. Charles 1; 58. Jane 3; 59. George 5.
And the administrators further return that they took into their possession a negro man named Harvey in the County of Rutherford State of Tennessee, which said negro afterwards made his escape from there & has not since been retaken. They further return that they also took into their possession a negro woman Patsy aged about 35 years whom they were compelled to leave on the road in Tennessee on account of sickness, having had a child on the road.
The foregoing negros were also included in the Inventory filed in the Court of Probate. Signed David Corpening, Francis P Glass, administrators." [March 1849]
Minerva Kezia (Sacket) Greenlee (1804–1851), First Presbyterian Church Cemetery, Morganton, North Carolina
(Src: Find a Grave, Aleta Stafford)
Samuel Greenlee (1783–1848), First Presbyterian Church Cemetery, Morganton, North Carolina
(Src: Find a Grave, Aleta Stafford)

Children of Minerva Kezia Sacket and Samuel Greenlee


782. Minerva Kezia Sacket, 1804–1851, daughter of (307) Augustus and Minerva Camp Sackett, was married, June 4, 1822, to Samuel Greenlee, about 1782-1850, of Morganton, NC., son of James A. Greenlee and Mary Mitchell.
     Samuel Greenlee was a college graduate, and when about to marry was a bachelor of 40 and a prosperous planter, noted alike for his temperate habits, his hospitality, and his business ability; and withal was a courtly gentleman. At the time of his death he was reputed to be the wealthiest man in his county, possessing an extensive landed estate and many slaves.
Children.
2007. Mary Minerva Greenlee, b. June 30, 1823, d. Apr. 18, 1887; m. Dr. Wm. L. McRee.
2008. James Augustus Greenlee, b. Mar, 1825; m. Augusta Denson.
2009. Samuel Bloir Greenlee, b. Dec. 31, 1826, d. July 17, 1865, unmarried.
2010. Emily Amelia Greenlee, b. June 11, 1829, d. Sept. 29, 1883; m. Dr. Christopher Happoldt.
2011. Ephraim Edward Greenlee, b. Nov. 16, 1830, d. Apr. 29, 1886; m. Sarah Louisa Butler.
2012. Elisabeth Sackett Greenlee, b. Sept. 10, 1832, d. Nov. 29, 1900; m. John A Dickson.
2013. Alexander Sackett Greenlee, b. Nov. 11, 1834, m. Elizabeth Glass.
2014. George Elisha Greenlee, b. Jan. 12, 1837; m. Jane E. McKinney.
2015. Adelia Augusta Greenlee, b. May 18, 1839, d. Nov. 4, 1841.

 Notes & Citations

  1. Charles Weygant, The Sacketts of America, "782. Minerva K. Sacket, b. Apr. 12, 1804, d. Aug. 1, 1851; m. Samuel Greenlee."
  2. Census.
  3. "New York, Marriage Newspaper Extracts, 1801–1880 (Barber Collection)", New York Evening Post (Ancestry image), Wednesday, June 26, 1822. "4th inst., Rutherford Co., N.C. Samuel Greenlee of Morganton, Burk Co. to Minerva Sacket dau of Augustus formerly of Sacketts Harbor, N.Y."
  4. "Rutherford County, North Carolina, U.S., Marriages, 1779-1868" (Ancestry image), "Greenlee, Samuel & Minerva Lackett [sic], 4 Jun 1822; William Koone, bm."
  5. Find a Grave.
  6. Gravestone, "Minerva K/ Wife of/ Samuel Greenlee,/ Born April 12, 1805,/ Died August 2, 1851,/ aged/ 46 yrs. 3 mos. & 20 dys."
  7. Gravestone, "Samuel Greenlee/ who died/ the 23rd May 1848/ in the Sixty Sixth/ Year of his age."
  8. 1850 United States Federal Census, Roll 622, p 347b
    Morganton, Burke County, North Carolina, 6 Aug 1850
    Greenlee, Minerva K, 44, real estate $12,000, b. NY
    Greenlee, Saml P, 22, farmer, real estate $4,500, b. NC
    Greenlee, Emily A, 21, real estate $4,500, b. NC
    Greenlee, Elizabeth, 17, real estate $4,500, b. NC
    Greenlee, Alexander, 15, student, real estate $4,500, b. NC
    Greenlee, George, 13, real estate $4,500, b. NC.
  9. 1850 United States Federal Census, Slave Schedules
    Morganton, Burke County, North Carolina
    M K Greenlee, 10 slaves, males aged 38 black, 23 b, 13 b, 7 mulatto, 4 months m, females aged 60 m, 31 b, 30 b, 14 b, 5 b
    S B Greenlee, 8 slaves, males aged 45 black, 22 b, 14 b, 10 b, 2 b, females aged 19 b, 18 b, 18 b
    Emily A Greenlee, 1 slave, female aged 6 black
    E E Greenlee, 1 slave, male aged 12 black
    Alexr Greenlee, 2 slaves, female aged 11 black, male aged 6 b.
Sackett line6th great-granddaughter of Thomas Sackett the elder of St Peter in Thanet
4th great-granddaughter of Simon Sackett the colonist
ChartsLine 3a (American)
Generation.Tree7O.3
Last Edited11 Jan 2024
Sackett Database6118 Minerva Kezia Sacket

Edward Sacket

FatherAugustus Sacket (1769-1827)
MotherMinerva Camp (1780-1837)
Birth27 February 1806, New York StateG,1,2
Death17 January 1866, Waupun, WisconsinG,1
Marriage29 March 1843, Watertown, Jefferson County, New York StateGCornelia E Beckwith1,3
Marriage15 October 1856, Saratoga Springs, New York StateGHannah Louise Doe4
Edward Sacket, son of Augustus Sacket and Minerva Camp, was born in New York StateG on 27 February 1806.1,2 He died aged 59 in Waupun, WisconsinG, on 17 January 18661 and was buried at Oakwood Cemetery, Berlin, Green Lake County, WisconsinG.5 He married first in Watertown, Jefferson County, New York StateG, on 29 March 1843, Cornelia E Beckwith.1,3 Cornelia was born on 9 September 1822.6,7 She died aged 32 on 22 November 18546 and was buried at Oakwood Cemetery, BerlinG.5,8 He married second at Saratoga Springs, New York StateG, on 15 October 1856, Hannah Louise Doe, daughter of Walter Doe and Mary Emmerson.4 Louise was born on 28 January 1818.6,7 She died aged 74 in Ann Arbor, Washtenaw County, MichiganG, on 27 March 18926,9 and was buried at Forest Hill Cemetery, Ann ArborG.5
     Edward was listed in the 1830 census as a householder in Hounsfield, Jefferson CountyG.10 In 1840 he was a householder in Sacket's Harbor, Jefferson CountyG.11
     Cornelia Beckwith was a student at the Black River Literary and Religious Institute, New York, in 1841.12
     In 1850 Edward was living in HounsfieldG and was recorded in the census as Edward Sackett, a merchant, aged 44 and born in New York. Living with him were his wife Cornelia, 29, and their children, Hobart, 6, and George, aged one. Edward's brother Elisha, 51 [actually 47], was also in the household.13
     In 1860 he was living in Chicago, Cook County, IllinoisG, and was recorded as Edward Sacket, a commission merchant, aged 52. Living with him were his second wife, Louisa, 40, Edward's children by his first marriage, Hobert, 16, George, 11, and Frederick, aged eight, and Edward and Louisa's son Walton, aged three. There was also a female servant in the household.14
     In 1870 Edward's widow Hannah was living in Ann Arbor, Washtenaw County, MichiganG, in the household of Ezra Seamon, lawyer, and his family, and was recorded in the census as Hannah L Sackett, aged 45. Her son Walter, 12, was living with her.15

Chicago City Directory

1861Sackett Edward, com mer, 186½ S Water, h 81 Throop

Ann Arbor City Directory

1886Sackett H Louise (wid Edward), res 74 E Huron.
Edward Sacket (1806–1866), Oakwood Cemetery, Berlin, Wisconsin
(Src: Find a Grave, Janet Marie)
Cornelia (Beckwith) Sacket (1822–1854), Oakwood Cemetery, Berlin, Wisconsin
(Src: Find a Grave, Janet Marie)
H Louise (Doe) Sacket
(1818–1892)
(Src: Thurmon King)
H Louise (Doe) Sacket (1818–1892), Forest Hill Cemetery, Ann Arbor, Michigan
(Src: Find a Grave, Twist)
H Louise (Doe) Sackett, second wife of Edward Sackett (1806-1866), gave Sackett Hall to the Tappan Presbyterian Association.

Children of Edward Sacket and Cornelia E Beckwith

Child of Edward Sacket and Hannah Louise Doe


783. Edward Sacket, 1806–1866, of Sacketts Harbor, N. Y., and Chicago, Ill., son of (307) Hon. Augustus and Minerva Camp Sackett, was married, March 29, 1843, to Cornelia E. Beckwith, 1822–1854, of Lyme, Conn. On October 16, 1856 he was married to his second wife, H. Louise Doe, 1818–1892, daughter of Walter Doe and his wife Mary Emmerson, of Satatoga Springs, N. Y. Edward Sacket was for a number of years associated his brother, George A. Sackett, in conducting a mercantile business, first at Sacketts Harbor, and then at Chicago. Later in life he became engaged in the raising of cranberries on an extensive scale, marketing as many as eleven thousand barrels from a single crop. He is said to have introduced cranberry culture in the west and one of his sons is still engaged in it in 1899. He died suddenly of heart disease at Waupun, Wis., enroute to his home at Chicago from Berlin, Wis.
Children.
2016. Hobart S. Sacket, b. Feb. 14, 1844; m. Martha A. Farley.
2017. George B. Sacket, b. June 7, 1849, d. May 30, 1894; m. Elma C. Dunham.
2018. Frederick W. Sacket, b. July 28, 1852; m. Frances E. Campbell.
2018a. Walter A. Sackett, b. July 17, 1857, d. Jan. 21, 1874.

 Notes & Citations

  1. Charles Weygant, The Sacketts of America, "783. Edward Sacket, b. Feb. 27, 1806, d. Jan. 17, 1866; m. Cornelia Beckwith.'
  2. Census.
  3. Website Brooklyn Genealogy, Marriage Index New York 1600s–1900. (Steve Morse), "1843, Watertown, Jefferson County, Sacket, Edward & Beckwith, Cornelia E."
  4. New York Observer (GenealogyBank.com image), 23 Oct 1856, "At Saratoga Springs, N.Y., Oct. 15th, by Rev. Walter P. Doe, of Providence, R.I., Mr. Edward Sacket, of Chicago, Ill., to Miss H. Louise Doe, of the former place."
  5. Find a Grave.
  6. Sacketts of America, "783. Edward Sacket, b. Feb. 27, 1806, d. Jan. 17, 1866; m. Corneila Beckwith.'
  7. Gravestone.
  8. American Antiquarian Society, "Newspaper Extractions from the Northeast, 1704–1930" (Ancestry image), New York Evening Post, "28 Nov 1854. Sacketts Harbor, Cornelia E Sackett w of Edward on 22nd."
  9. "Historical Newspapers, Birth, Marriage, & Death Announcements, 1851–2003" (Ancestry image), Chicago Daily Tribune, 28 March 1892, "Mrs. H.L.D. Sackett. / Ann Arbor, Mich., March 27.—[Special.]—Mrs. H. Louise D. Sackett died in this city this evening of paralysis. She gave Sackett Hall and the site on which McMillan Hall stands to the Tappan Presbyterian Association, and recently gave a $4,000 organ to the Presbyterian Church. She gave during her life fully $50,000 in benefactions."
  10. 1830 United States census, "Edward Sacket, Hounsfield, Jefferson County, New York, 1 male 15-19, 3 males 20-29, 1 female 15-19, 1 female 50-59, total 7."
  11. 1840 United States census, "Edward Sacket, Sackets Harbor, Jefferson County, New York State, 1 male 10-14, 2 males 30-39, 1 female 15-19, total 4."
  12. "U.S., High School Student Lists, 1821-1923" (Ancestry image), Black River Literary and Religious Institute, New York, 1841, "Cornelia Beckwith, Watertown."
  13. 1850 United States Federal Census, Roll M432_514, p. 163
    Hounsfield, Jefferson, New York
    Sackett, Edward, 44, merchant, b. NY
    Sackett, Cornelia C, 29, b. NY
    Sackett, Hobart S, 6, b. NY
    Sackett, George B, 1, b. NY
    Bryant, Mary, 23, b. NY
    Warden, Sally, 30, b. NY
    Sackett, Elisha C, 51, merchant, b. NY.
  14. 1860 United States Federal Census, Roll M653_166, p 282, FHL film 803166
    Chicago, Cook County, Illinois
    Sacket, Edward, 52, commission merchant, personal estate $500, b. NY
    Sacket, Louisa, 40, b. NY
    Sacket, Hobert, 16, b. NY
    Sacket, George, 11, b. NY
    Sacket, Frederick, 8, b. NY
    Sacket, Walton, 3, b. MI
    Beman, Jane, 30, servant, b. Ireland.
  15. 1870 United States Federal Census, Roll M593_707, p 36B, FHL film
    Ann Arbor, Washtenaw County, Michigan
    Seamon, Ezra C, 60, lawyer, real estate $10000, personal estate $20000, b. NY
    Seamon, Manetta, 57, keeping house, b. NY
    Seamon, John M, 23, at home, b. MI
    Sackett, Hannah L, 45, at home, personal estate $15000, b. NY
    Sackett, Walter, 12, at school, b. MI
    Hammond, Rosa, 17, domestic servant, b. MI.
Appears inSackett places
Sackett line6th great-grandson of Thomas Sackett the elder of St Peter in Thanet
4th great-grandson of Simon Sackett the colonist
ChartsLine 3a (American)
Generation.Tree7O.3
Last Edited12 Mar 2024
Sackett Database6203 Edward Sacket

Charlotte Sacket

FatherAugustus Sacket (1769-1827)
MotherMinerva Camp (1780-1837)
Birth17 November 18081,2
Death14 February 18101
Charlotte Sacket, daughter of Augustus Sacket and Minerva Camp, was born on 17 November 1808.1,2 She died in infancy on 14 February 1810.1

 Notes & Citations

  1. Charles Weygant, The Sacketts of America, "784. Charlotte Sacket, b. Nov. 17, 1809, d. Feb. 14, 1810."
  2. There is a discrepancy between the birth dates of Charlotte and her brother Thomas Ogden Sacket.
Sackett line6th great-granddaughter of Thomas Sackett the elder of St Peter in Thanet
4th great-granddaughter of Simon Sackett the colonist
ChartsLine 3a (American)
Generation.Tree7O.3
Last Edited14 Mar 2024
Sackett Database6227 Charlotte Sacket

Thomas Ogden Sacket

FatherAugustus Sacket (1769-1827)
MotherMinerva Camp (1780-1837)
Birth13 February 18101,2
Death13 August 18111
Thomas Ogden Sacket, son of Augustus Sacket and Minerva Camp, was born on 13 February 1810.1,2 He died in infancy on 13 August 18111 and was buried at Grace Episcopal Churchyard, Jamaica, Queens County, New York StateG.3

 Notes & Citations

  1. Charles Weygant, The Sacketts of America, "785. Thomas O. Sacket, b. Feb. 13, 1811, d. Aug. 13, 1811."
  2. There is a discrepancy between the date of birth recorded in The Sacketts of America and age at death on burial record.
  3. Find a Grave, "Thomas Ogden, son of Augustus and Minerva Sackett, died Aug. 13, 1811. Age 1 year, 6 months."
Sackett line6th great-grandson of Thomas Sackett the elder of St Peter in Thanet
4th great-grandson of Simon Sackett the colonist
ChartsLine 3a (American)
Generation.Tree7O.3
Last Edited14 Mar 2024

George A Sacket

FatherAugustus Sacket (1769-1827)
MotherMinerva Camp (1780-1837)
Birth20 July 1812, New York CityG,1
Death1 April 1883, Geneva, Kane County, IllinoisG,1,2
Marriageabout 1837Harriet Canfield1,3
Marriagebefore 1850Eliza A Kellogg4,1
Marriageabout 1865Harriet Woodruff3,1
George A Sacket, son of Augustus Sacket and Minerva Camp, was born in Jamaica, Queens, Long Island, New York CityG, on 20 July 1812.1 He died aged 70 in Geneva, Kane County, IllinoisG, on 1 April 18831,2 and was buried at Graceland Cemetery, Chicago, IllinoisG.5,6 He married first about 1837, Harriet Canfield, daughter of John Montgomery Canfield and Fanny Harvey.1,3 Harriet was born in 1819. She died aged about 29 in Sacket's Harbor, Jefferson County, New York StateG, on 28 January 1848 and was buried at Lakeside Cemetery, Sacket's HarborG.5,7,8 He married second before 1850, Eliza A Kellogg, daughter of Israel Kellogg and Honor Burt.4,1 Eliza was born in New York StateG about 1828.4 She died aged about 33 on 16 April 18621 and was buried at Graceland Cemetery, ChicagoG.5,9 He married third about 1865, Harriet Woodruff, daughter of H Woodruff and Lodema Andus.3,1 Harriet was born in New York StateG in June 1823.4 She died aged 82 in Geneva, Kane County, IllinoisG, on 9 November 19051 and was buried at Graceland Cemetery, ChicagoG.5,10
     George was listed in the 1840 census as a householder in Sacket's Harbor, Jefferson County, New York StateG.11
     In 1850 he was living in Hounsfield, Jefferson CountyG, and was recorded as Geo A Sackett, a merchant, aged 40 and born in New York. Living with him were his wife Eliza, 23, and his children, Frederick, 12, Jane, 9, and Edward, aged four, by his first marriage.12
     In 1860 he was living in Chicago, IllinoisG, and was recorded as Geo A Sackett, a merchant, aged 48. Living with him were his wife Eliza, 31, his children, Jennie, 19, and Edward, 13, by his first marriage, and his and Eliza's children, Charles, 9, and Eliza, aged two.13
     George was elected as Junior Warden at Christ Church, ChicagoG, in March 1869.14
     In 1870 he was living in Geneva, Kane County, IllinoisG, and was recorded as Geo A Sackett, a merchant, aged 57. Living with him were his wife Harriet, 46, their son George W, aged three, and George A Sackett's son Frederick, 31, by his first marriage.15
     In 1880 he was living in GenevaG and was recorded as George A. Sackett, a fire insurance agent, aged 68. Living with him were his wife Harriet, 58, and their son George W, 13.16
     In 1900 George's widow Harriet was living at Third Street, GenevaG, and was recorded in the census as Harriet Sackett, aged 76.17

Chicago City Directory

1861Sacket George A., com mer, 231 S Water, h Indiana av nr Old
1867Sackett George A. (Sackett & Co.) r. 166 Calumet av.
Sackett & Co. (George A. Sackett and —), com. mers. 86 S. Water
George A Sacket (1812–1883), Graceland Cemetery, Chicago, Illinois
(Src: Find a Grave, Shawn Sackett)
Harriet (Canfield) Sacket (1819–1848), Lakeside Cemetery, Sacket's Harbor, New York
(Src: Find a Grave, Anne Cady)
Eliza A (Kellogg) Sacket (1829–1862), Graceland Cemetery, Chicago, Illinois
(Src: Find a Grave, Shawn Sackett)
Harriet N (Woodruff) Sacket (1822–1905), Graceland Cemetery, Chicago, Illinois
(Src: Find a Grave, Shawn Sackett)

Children of George A Sacket and Harriet Canfield

Children of George A Sacket and Eliza A Kellogg

Child of George A Sacket and Harriet Woodruff


786. George A. Sacket, 1812–1883, son of (307) Hon. Augustus Sacket, was for many years engaged with his brother Edward in the mercantile business, and in commerce on the lakes, first at Sacketts Harbor and later at Chicago. He was thrice married; 1st, to Harriet Canfield, daughter of J. M. Canfield; 2d, to Eliza Kellogg, 18__–1862, daughter of Israel Kellogg, and his wife Honor Burt, and 3d, to Harriet Woodruff, 18__–1905, daughter of H. Woodruff and Lodema Andus.
Children.
2019. Frederick A. Sacket, b. in 1845, d. in 1894, unmarried.
2020. Jane M. Sacket, b. in 1846; m. Fred W. Wood.
2021. Edward A. Sackett, b. in 1847; m. Sallie Rankin.
2022. Charles K. Sacket, b. in 1851; not married in 1907.
2023. Lilley Sacket, b. in 1858, d. in 1866.
2024. George W. Sacket, b. in 1866, d. in 1895; m. Belle M. Wilbur.


     George A. Sackett was born in Jamaica, L.I., July 20, 1812, consequently was 70 years of age at the time of his death, which occurred at Geneva, Ill., April 1. He was brought up in New York City, and there received a good common-school education. At an early age he went to Sackett's Harbor with his father, for whom the town was named, and when 17 years old started in business on his own account, making some very successful ventures. During the Patriot War on Canada, which gave him an additional start, he became largely interested in vessels, and was one of the first to recognize the importance of Chicago as a grain market. Here he did considerable [business] in buying and shipping to Oswego in his own vessels. In 1854 he removed to Chicago and became engaged in the iron and coal trade. In 1858 he was succeeded in this by Hale & Ayer. He was one of the earliest members of the Board of Trade, and was prominent in its dealings, remaining in the organization until 1870, when he retired from business to his home in Geneva. He was one of the earliest members of Christ R. E. Church, was one its wardens for many years, was in sympathy with the rector, the Rev. C. E. Cheney, and took part in the movement that resulted in the formation of the Reformed Episcopal Church, always maintaining the greatest interest in the new organization. He was of a quiet and reserved disposition, and passed the last years of his life in the quietude and enjoyment of his library and garden. He was sick for three months with cancer of the stomach, and passed peacefully away at the 3 April 1883 last. He leaves a wife and five children to mourn his loss.

Chicago Daily Tribune, 3 April 1883

 Notes & Citations

  1. Charles Weygant, The Sacketts of America, "786. George A. Sacket, b. July 20, 1812, d. Apr. 1, 1880; m. Harriet Camfield."
  2. "Historical Newspapers, Birth, Marriage, & Death Announcements, 1851–2003" (Ancestry image), Chicago Daily Tribune, 3 April 1883.
  3. Date of marriage based on birth of first child.
  4. Census.
  5. Find a Grave.
  6. "Illinois Death Index 1877–1916" (Ancestry transcript), "Sackett, George A, d. Geneva, Kane, Illinois, 1 Apr 1883, age 70 Yr."
  7. The Buffalo Commercial, Buffalo, New York (Newspapers.com image), 4 Feb 1848, p 2, "Died. At Sackets Harbor, on the 24th ult., of a lingering illness, in the 28th year of her age, Harriet Sacket, wife of George A. Sacket, and daughter of John M. Canfield."
  8. Gravestone, "Harriet Sacket/ died Jan 28, 1848, æ 29."
  9. "Cook County, Illinois, Death Index 1833–1889" (Ancestry transcript), "Sacket, Eliza A, d. Cook County, Illinois, 18 Apr 1862."
  10. Chicago Tribune (Newspapers.com image), 10 Nov 1905, p 14, "Sacket—At Geneva, Ill., Nov. 9, Harriet Woodruff Sacket. Funeral from her late residence, Geneva, Ill., Saturday, Nov. 11, at 11:30 a.m. Burial private. Watertwon (N.Y.) papers please copy."
  11. 1840 United States census, "George Sackett, Sackets Harbor, Jefferson County, New York State, 1 male under 5, 1 male 15-19, 1 male 20-29, 2 females 20-29, total 5."
  12. 1850 United States Federal Census, Roll M432_514, p. 163
    Hounsfield, Jefferson, New York
    578/578
    Sackett, Geo A, 40, merchant, b. NY
    Sackett, Eliza, 23, b. NY
    Sackett, Frederick, 12, b. NY
    Sackett, Jane, 9, b. NY
    Sackett, Edward, 4, b. NY
    Canfield, Jane, 50, b. NY
    Hoyt, Margaret, 35, b. Ireland.
  13. 1860 United States Federal Census, Roll M653_164FHL Film 803164, p 215
    Chicago Ward 1, Cook, Illinois
    Sackett, Geo A, 48, mercht, personal estate $2,000, b. NY
    Sackett, Eliza, 31, b. NY
    Sackett, Jennie M, 19, b. NY
    Sackett, Edward, 13, b. NY
    Sackett, Chas, 9, b. NY
    Sackett, Eliza, 2, b. IL
    Hutchinson, Samuel, 47, mercht
    Lynch, Kate, 19, servant, b. Ireland
    Hitchtock, Horatio, 45, doctor, real estate $30,000, personal estate $5,000, b. NY
    Hitchtock, Louisa, 38, b. NY
    Hitchtock, Ella, 6, b. IL
    Kelogg, Laura, 26, schoolteacher, b. VT
    Conden, Kate, 26, servant, b. Ireland.
  14. Chicago Evening Post (Newspapers.com image), 30 Mar 1869, p 4, "Church Elections, Christ Church, Junior Warden—George A. Sackett."
  15. 1870 United States Federal Census, Roll M593_237, p 378B
    Geneva, Kane, Illinois
    Sackett, Geo A, 57, merchant, real estate $4,700, personal estate $2,000, b. NY
    Sackett, Harriet, 46, keeping house, b. NY
    Sackett, George W, 3, b. IL
    Sackett, Frederick, 31, clerk in store, b. NY
    Woodruff, Soden, 79, at home, b. NY
    Ensten, Mary, 18, domestic servt, b. Sweden.
  16. 1880 United States Federal Census, Geneva, Kane, Illinois
    Roll 218, p 379D, Enumeration District 087
    Geneva, Kane, Illinois
    Sackett, George A., head, 68, fire insurance agt., b. NY, father b. NY, mother b. NY
    Sackett, Harriet W., wife, 58, keeping house, b. NY, father b. NY, mother b. NY
    Sackett, George W., son, 13, at school, b. IL, father b. NY, mother b. NY.
  17. 1900 United States Federal Census, Roll 312, p 15, Enumeration District 0108
    Third Street, Geneva, Kane, Illinois
    Sackett, Harriet, head, b. Jun 1823, 76, wd, 1 ch. 0 living, b. NY, father b. CT, mother b. NY, home owned free of mortgage, house
    Douglas, Charles F, boarder, b. Aug 1839, 60, wd, tin & copper smith, b. NJ, father b. NJ, mother b. NY.
Sackett line6th great-grandson of Thomas Sackett the elder of St Peter in Thanet
4th great-grandson of Simon Sackett the colonist
ChartsLine 3a (American)
Generation.Tree7O.3
Last Edited14 Mar 2024

Alexander Sacket

FatherAugustus Sacket (1769-1827)
MotherMinerva Camp (1780-1837)
Marriage11 July 1836, ClevelandGHarriet Johnson1,4
Alexander Sacket, son of Augustus Sacket and Minerva Camp, was born in Meadville, Crawford County, PennsylvaniaG, on 17 August 1814.1,2,3 He died aged 70 in Cleveland, Cuyahoga County, OhioG, on 24 September 1884 and was buried at Lake View Cemetery, ClevelandG.1,5,6 He married in ClevelandG on 11 July 1836, Harriet Johnson, daughter of Capt Levi Johnson and Margaret Monteeth.1,4 Harriet was born in ClevelandG on 10 December 1815.7,8 She died there aged 81 on 6 October 1897 and was buried at Lake View Cemetery, ClevelandG.6,9
     Alexander was taxed on real and personal property in Cuyahoga CountyG from 1836.10
     Alexander was listed in the 1840 census as a householder in ClevelandG.11
     In 1850 Alexander was living in ClevelandG and was recorded in the census as Alex R Sackett, a merchant, aged 36 and born in Pennsylvania. Living with him were his wife Harriet, 33, and their children, Margaret, 13, Levi, 8, Harriet, 6, and Mary, aged five.12
     In 1860 he was living in East Cleveland, Cuyahoga CountyG, and was recorded as Alex'r Sackett, a merchant, aged 45. Living with him were his wife Harriet, 40, and their children, Margaret, 22, Levi, 17, Harriet, 14, Mary, 12, and Ellen, aged nine.13
     In 1870 he was living in East ClevelandG and was recorded as Alexander Sackett, a real estate agent, aged 53. Living with him were his wife Harriet, 52, and their children, Levi, 26, Harriet, 24, Mary, 21, and Ellen, aged 18. There were also two female domestic servants and a male gardener in the household. Alexander's real estate was valued at $75,000 and his personal estate at $10,000.14
     In 1880 he was living in ClevelandG and was recorded as Alexander Sacket, a real estate dealer, aged 65. Living with him were his wife Harriet, 64, and their children, Levi, 32 [actually 37], Harriet, 25 [actually 35], and Ellen, 21 [actually 29]. There were also a coachman and two female servants in the household.15
     Alexander applied for a US passport in Cuyahoga CountyG on 7 July 1880. The ages of his daughters Harriet and Ellen were understated on the application by eight years and six years respectively.3
     Alexander, his wife Harriet, and their daughters, Harriet and Ellen, visited England in 1881, returning to New York on the SS Gallia on 26 April 1881. The daughters had shed a few more years during the trip, Harriet's age now understated by twelve years and Ellen's by eight.16,17

Cleveland City Directory

1881Sackett Alexander, office 95½ Bank, res. 1353 Euclid av.
1885Sacket Alex. office 178 Bank, r. 1353 Euclid av.
1887, 88, 91, 94Sacket Harriet, wid. Alex. r. 1353 Euclid av.
1895, 98Sacket Harriet, wid. Alex. r. 1490 Euclid av.
Alexander Sacket (1814–1884), Lake View Cemetery, Cleveland, Ohio
(Src: Find a Grave, clio)
Alexander Sacket (1814–1884), Lake View Cemetery, Cleveland, Ohio
(Src: Find a Grave, clio)
Harriet (Johnson) Sacket (1815–1897), Lake View Cemetery, Cleveland, Ohio
(Src: Find a Grave, Rick Foster)

Children of Alexander Sacket and Harriet Johnson


787. Alexander Sacket, 1814–1884, of Meadville, Pa., New York City, and Cleveland, Ohio, son of (307) Hon. Augustus and Minerva Camp Sacket, was married at Cleveland, Ohio, July 15, 1836, to Harriet Johnson, daughter of Levi Johnson and his wife Margaret Monteeth.
Children.
2025. Margaret M. Sacket, b. May 3, 1838; m. Virgil C. Taylor.
2026. Edward Sacket, b. Aug. 10, 1839, d. Aug. 11, 1840.
2027. Levi A. Sacket, b. Aug. 5, 1842, d. Apr. 12, 1897; m. Rose Barclay.
2028. Harriet O. Sacket, b. Nov. 6, 1844; m. Henry T. Rambough.
2029. Mary G. Sacket, b. June 19, 1847; m. Charles E. Brown.
2030. Ellen H. Sacket, b. Nov. 27, 1850; m. Harris H. Baxter.
2031. Sophia C. Sacket, b. Oct. 15, 1855; d. Mar. 31, 1856.


Sacket

Alexander Sacket, for long years one of the most prominent merchants in town, had his first glimpse of Cleveland in 1835-the year he became of age.
     He was the son of Augustus Sacket of Sacket's Harbor, N. Y. He had received a liberal education, and, though young, considerable mercantile training as well, therefore, well able to cope with the difficulties and obstacles inevitable in his new business enterprise.
     His first employment was with Peter Weddell on the corner of Superior and Bank streets, the site of the Rockefeller building. But it was not long before he branched out for himself and started a dry-goods store just west of his employer on the site of the Johnson House, and now also covered by the big sky-scraper. In this enterprise he was aided and advised by Peter Weddell, who delighted in the kindly help and encouragement of the young in their first start in business life.
     Alexander Sacket married Miss Hannah Johnson, born in the city and one year his junior. She was the daughter of the pioneer, Capt. Levi Johnson.
     She remained ever a quiet, domestic woman, caring little for events that did not include her husband and household of seven children. The family lived at 37 Ontario street, as early as 1837, and later removed to the south side of Euclid ave., near what is now East 67th street. The
homestead was roomy, and well adapted for the happiness of a family of young people, and was surrounded by spacious grounds.
     Eventually, Mr. Sacket changed his business to the river front, where his warehouse long remained a landmark in that locality. And upon retiring from this, he gave his remaining years to real-estate transactions, in which his son-in-law, Mr. V. C. Taylor, was, and yet remains, a prominent and popular dealer.
The children of Alexander and Harriet Johnson Sacket
Margaret Sacket, married Virgil C.. Tayler, son of Hector and Polly Carter Tayler.
Harriet Sacket, m. Henry Rumbaugh of North Carolina.
Mary Sacket, m. Charles Brown of Buffalo, N. Y.
Levi Sacket, m. Rose Barcley, dau of Dr. J. T. and Hannah Barcley.
Ellen Sacket, m. Dr. H. H. Baxter a practicing physician of the city.

The only son of the family to reach manhood became an active business man in the community. He died in the prime of life.
     Alexander Sacket died in 1884, and Mrs. Sacket in 1897. The cemetery lot of the family is in Lake View.

—Gertrude Van Rensselaer Wickham, The Pioneer Families of Cleveland, 1796–1840. Evangelical Publishing House, 1914.

 Notes & Citations

  1. Charles Weygant, The Sacketts of America, "787. Alexander Sacket, b. Aug. 17, 1814, d. Sept. 24, 1884; m. Harriet Johnson."
  2. Census.
  3. "US Passport Applications, 1795–1925" (Ancestry image), "Cuyahoga County, Ohio, Alexander Sacket, b. Meadville, Pennsylvania, 17 Aug 1814, with wife Harriet, 64, and daughters, Harriet O, 27, and Ellen H, 23. Sworn 7 Jul 1880. Description of Alexander Sacket: age 65, ht 6 feet, forehead high, eyes blue, nose straight, mouth medium, chin round, hair brown & whiskers gray, complexion fair, face oval."
  4. "Cuyahoga County, Ohio, Marriage Records, 1810–1973" (Ancestry image), "11 Jul 1836, Cuyahoga County, Ohio, Alexander Sacket and Harriet Johnson. By S C Aikin, Pastor 1st Pres Ch, Cleveland."
  5. "Ohio Deaths and Burials, 1854–1997" (FamilySearch transcript), "Alexander Sackett, 70, married, d. Cleveland, Cuyahoga, Ohio, 24 Sep 1884."
  6. Find a Grave.
  7. Gravestone.
  8. Death record.
  9. "Ohio, Select County Death Records,1840-1908" (Ancestry image), "Harriet Sacket, 81, wd, d. Cleveland, Cuyahoga, Ohio, 6 Oct 1897, old age, b. City [Cleveland], res. 1490 Euclid, father Levi Johnson b. NY, mother Margaret Johnson b. PA, bur. Lake View."
  10. "Ohio, U.S., Tax Records, 1800-1850" (Ancestry image), Cleveland City, Cuyahoga, Ohio, 1836, "Sacket, Alexander, personal property $3,000, tax $31.75."; 1849, "Sacket, Alexander, personal property $725, tax $9.82."; East Cleveland, Cuyahoga, Ohio, 1864, "Sacket, Alexander, personal property $1,440, tax $18.00."; Brooklyn Township, Cuyahoga, Ohio, 1864, "Sacket, Alexander, lot 67, NWP of 44 3/4a S Side, 30 acres, value $2,385."; Middleburgh Township, Cuyahoga, Ohio, 1864, "Sacket, Alexander, range 14, township 6, section 19, lot 2, SE C, 6 acres, value $106, tax $1.42."; Cleveland City, Cuyahoga, Ohio, 1864, "Sacket, Alexander, lots 107 to 133, N End of 27ft W Side, feet front 27, Ohio St, feet deep 90 7/12, value $565, tax $27.59."; 1864, "Sacket, Alexander, lots 134 to 136, sublot 23, Whole lot, feet front 66, Lake St, feet deep 132, value $1,288, tax $28.72."; 1864, "Sacket, Alexander, lots 134 to 136, sublot 7, ½ in C?, feet front 33, Park to Lake Erie, value $646, tax $13.51."; 1869, "Sacket, Alexander, personal property $1,430, tax $24.16."; 1869, "Sacket, Alexander, lot 84, NP of 148ft S End of E Side, feet front 40, Ontario & Alley St, feet deep 120, value $6,928, tax $214.76."; 1869, "Sacket, Alexander, lots 191 to 193, NP of 127ft S P 30ft on Cuya river, feet front 15, River St to Cuya River, value $5,667, tax $198.06."
  11. 1840 United States census, "Alexr Sackett, Cleveland Ward 2, Cuyahoga County, Ohio, 1 male under 5, 3 males 20-29, 1 female under 5, 1 female 15-19, 2 females 20-29, total 8."
  12. 1850 United States Federal Census, Roll 672, p 191a
    Cleveland Ward 2, Cuyahoga, Ohio
    Sackett, Alex R, 36, merchant, b. PA
    Sackett, Harriet, 33, b. OH
    Sackett, Margaret, 13, b. OH
    Sackett, Levi, 8, b. OH
    Sackett, Harriet, 6, b. OH
    Sackett, Mary, 5, b. OH
    Rogers, Rosa, 30, b. Ireland
    Forscrins, John, 24, carpenter & joiner, b. Germany.
  13. 1860 United States Federal Census, Roll M653_955FHL Film 803955, p 770
    East Cleveland, Cuyahoga, Ohio
    Sackett, Alex'r, 45, comm mcht, real estate $40,000, personal estate $1,000, b. PA
    Sackett, Harriett O, 40, b. OH
    Sackett, Margaret M, 22, b. OH
    Sackett, Levi A, 17, b. OH
    Sackett, Harriett O, 14, b. OH
    Sackett, Mary G, 12, b. OH
    Sackett, Ellen H, 9, b. OH
    Crawford, Wm, 21, domestic, b. OH
    Heitzman, Lizzie, 17, b. Germany.
  14. 1870 United States Federal Census, Roll M593_1192, p 265B
    East Cleveland, Cuyahoga, Ohio
    Sackett, Alexander, 53, real estate agt, real estate $75,000, personal estate $10,000, b. PA
    Sackett, Harriet, 52, keeping house, b. OH
    Sackett, Levi, 26, clk in real estate office, b. OH
    Sackett, Harriet, 24, at home, b. OH
    Sackett, Mary, 21, at home, b. OH
    Sackett, Ellen, 18, at home, b. OH
    Scanlan, Bridget, 23, domestic servant, b. Ireland
    Faber, Kate, 19, domestic servant, b. Ireland
    Schmit, Otto, 20, gardener, b. Baden, Germany.
  15. 1880 United States Federal Census, Roll 1008, p 160d, Enumeration District 048
    1353 Euclid Avenue, Cleveland, Cuyahoga, Ohio
    Sacket, Alexander, head, 65, real estate dealer, b. PA, father b. NY, mother b. CT
    Sacket, Harriet, wife, 64, housekeeper, b. OH, father b. NY, mother b. PA
    Sacket, Levi A., son, 32, real estate dealer, b. OH, father b. PA, mother b. OH
    Sacket, Harriet O., daughter, 25, at home, b. OH, father b. PA, mother b. OH
    Sacket, Ellen H., daughter, 21, at home, b. OH, father b. PA, mother b. OH
    Krause, Otto, other, male, single, 31, b. Prussia, coachman, father b. Prussia, mother b. Prussia
    Hiltebrandt, Mary, other, single, 23, b. Switzerland, servant, father b. Switzerland, mother b. Switzerland
    Hiltebrandt, Maggie, other, single, 26, b. Switzerland, servant, father b. Switzerland, mother b. Switzerland.
  16. "New York Passenger Lists, 1820–1957" (Ancestry image), SS Gallia, arr. New York, 26 Apr 1881, from Liverpool, England, & Queenstown, Ireland, "Alexander Sackett, 66, gentleman; Harriet Sackett, 65, wife; Ella Sackett, 22, spinster; Hattie Sackett, 24, spinster."
  17. The understatement of the ages of Alexander's daughters Harriet and Ellen on his passport application, on the 1880 census, and on the ship's passenger list was clearly deliberate, albeit the numbers of years understated were inconsistent. It may be surmised that the intent was to improve the daughters' marriage prospects.
Appears inSackett snippets
Sackett line6th great-grandson of Thomas Sackett the elder of St Peter in Thanet
4th great-grandson of Simon Sackett the colonist
ChartsLine 3a (American)
Generation.Tree7O.3
Last Edited13 Sep 2024
Sackett Database6252 Alexander Sacket

Enos Camp Sacket

FatherAugustus Sacket (1769-1827)
MotherMinerva Camp (1780-1837)
Birth17 January 18171
Death18171
Enos Camp Sacket, son of Augustus Sacket and Minerva Camp, was born on 17 January 1817.1 He died in infancy the same year.1

 Notes & Citations

  1. Charles Weygant, The Sacketts of America, "788. Enos Camp Sacket, b. Jan. 17, 1817, d. in 1817."
Sackett line6th great-grandson of Thomas Sackett the elder of St Peter in Thanet
4th great-grandson of Simon Sackett the colonist
ChartsLine 3a (American)
Generation.Tree7O.3
Last Edited17 Mar 2024
Sackett Database6257 Enos Camp Sacket

Margaret Ann Fish

FatherNicholas Fish (1758-1833)
MotherElizabeth Stuyvesant
Birth11 February 1807, Manhattan, New York CityG,1,2
Death3 March 1877, ManhattanG,2
Marriageabout 1830John Neilson Jr.1,3
Margaret Ann Fish, daughter of Nicholas Fish and Elizabeth Stuyvesant, was born in Manhattan, New York CityG, on 11 February 1807.1,2 She died there aged 70 on 3 March 1877.2 She married about 1830, John Neilson Jr.1,3

Children of Margaret Ann Fish and John Neilson Jr.

 Notes & Citations

  1. Charles Weygant, The Sacketts of America, "790. Margaret Ann Fish, b. Feb. 11, 1807; m. John Neilson, Jr."
  2. Sackett database.
  3. Date of marriage based on birth of first child.
Sackett line6th great-granddaughter of Thomas Sackett the elder of St Peter in Thanet
4th great-granddaughter of Simon Sackett the colonist
ChartsLine 3a (American)
Noel Armstrong & Annie Corbin Harper relationship chart
Generation.Tree7O.3
Last Edited7 Feb 2022
Sackett Database6322 Margaret Ann Fish

Hon Hamilton Fish

FatherNicholas Fish (1758-1833)
MotherElizabeth Stuyvesant
Birth3 August 1808, New York CityG,1,2,3
Death7 September 1893, Garrison, New York StateG,1,2
Marriage15 December 1836, New York CityGJulia Ursin Niemcewicz Kean2,4,5
Hon. Hamilton Fish
(1808–1893)
(Src: Wikipedia)
Hon Hamilton Fish, Governor of New York, U.S. Senator, and Secretary of State, son of Nicholas Fish and Elizabeth Stuyvesant, was born in New York CityG on 3 August 18081,2,3 and died aged 85 at Glenclyffe, near Garrison, New York State, on 7 September 1893.1,2 He married in New York CityG on 15 December 1836, Julia Ursin Niemcewicz Kean, daughter of Peter Philip James Kean and Sarah Sabina Morris.2,4,5 Julia was born at Ursino, near Elizabeth, New Jersey, on 19 December 18164 and died aged 70 in New York CityG on 30 June 1887.4
     Hamilton Fish was U.S. Secretary of State from 1869 to 1877 during the administration of President Ulysses S Grant. He had earlier served as Governor of New York State for the two years 1849 and 1850, and was a U.S. senator for six years from 1851. He was the first of four Hamilton Fishes to serve in the US House of Representatives.
     His son, Hamilton Fish II (1849–1936), served two terms in the House, 1909–1911 and 1923–1925. Hamilton Stuyvesant Fish (1888–1991), son of Hamilton Fish II, and also known as Hamilton Fish Jr., served in the House from 1920 through 1945. Hamilton Fish IV (1926–1996), son of Hamilton Fish III, served in the House from 1969 to 1995.
     Hamilton Fish V, son of Hamilton Fish IV, also ran for a House seat in 1988 and 1994 but was defeated both times.

Children of Hon Hamilton Fish and Julia Ursin Niemcewicz Kean


791. Hon. Hamilton Fish, 1808–1893, son of (312) Col., Nicholas and Elisabeth Stuyvesant Fish, was married, Dec. 15, 1836, to Julia Kearn, daughter of Peter Kearn, and granddaughter of Hon. John Kearn, of South Carolina, who was a member of Congress on the Confederation, 1786–9. Hamilton Fish was born in New York City, and there received his instruction preparatory for college at the famous school of Monsieur Bancel, and exiled French Legitimist, from whom he obtained a well grounded and lasting knowledge of the French language, which was of service to him in after years. In 1827 he was graduated from Columbia College with highest honors, and immediately began the study of law with Peter A. Jay, son of Chief Justice Jay. Three years later he was admitted to the bar and formed a partnership with William Beach Lawrence, editor and commentator of Wheaton's International Law. He devoted himself to chancery and real estate practice and gave much time to the study of international law. Outside of his profession he took an interest in political affairs, in promoting movements for advancing the welfare of Columbia College, and the Protestant Episcopal Church, of which he was a member; and also in the establishment of public libraries and other institutions and charities in New York City. In 1842, at the age of thirty-four, he was elected to Congress and served one term. In 1847 he was elected Lieutenant Governor of the State of New York for the unexpired term of one year, occasioned by the resignation of Lieut. Governor Gardner. In 1848 he was elected Governor of said State, beginning his term on the first of January, 1849. On the expiration of his term as Governor he was chosen by the New York Legislature, United States Senator, for the term commencing that year, 1851. On the expiration of his term as Senator, in 1857, he with his family visited Europe and made an extended tour, increasing his knowledge of foreign countries and foreign affairs by personal observation and intercourse, having after attaining his majority come into possession of three separate fortunes, one from his father, one from his mother, and one from his uncle, Petrus Stuyvesant, he was free to use his time and his talents as to him seemed best. He, however, returned to his native land in time to give his earnest and effective aid to the election of Abraham Lincoln. When the Rebellion broke out in the spring of 1861, he united in the formation of the Union Defence Committee, and soon afterwards, when General Dix, its first chairman, went into military service, he became chairman of the committee. This committee in its influence and labors was of immense value to the Union cause. Later in the war of the Rebellion, Mr. Fish was the leading member of the commission appointed by President Lincoln to arrange with the Confederate authorities for the exchange of prisoners. Through the efforts of Mr. Fish and his associates, an arrangement after much difficulty was agreed upon, which continued to the end of the war. In March, 1869, Mr. Fish became Secretary of State and continued in that office throughout the entire eight years of General Grant's terms as President, during which he was General Grant's most trusted advisor. The invaluable services rendered his country by Mr. Fish during these eight years, form an important chapter in the history of this Republic. The degree of LL. D. was conferred upon him in 1850 by Columbia College, in 1869 by Union college, and in 1871 by Harvard University. He was President of the National Society of the Cincinnati for nearly forty years; a trustee of Columbia College for more than fifty years, during thirty-five of which he was their chairman; a trustee of the Astor Library; one of the presidents of the New York Historical Society; and frequently a delegate to the Diocesan and General Conventions of the Protestant Episcopal Church. A fitting tribute to his memory was paid by the Legislature of New York State on the evening of April 5, 1894, at the Capitol, at which the Governor and State Officers were present, and an eloquent oration upon his life and public services was delivered by Senator Edmunds of Vermont.
Children.
2045. Nicholas Fish, m. Clemence S. Brice.
2046. Hamilton Fish, b. Apr. 17, 1859 [sic: 1849].
2047. Stuyvesant Fish, b. June 24, 1851.


Hon. Hamilton Fish, eldest son of Colonel Nicholas and Elizabeth (Stuyvesant) Fish, was born August 3, 1808, in New York, and graduated from Columbia College in 1827. He was admitted to the bar in 1830, but early turned his attention to political affairs. He became prominent in the Whig party. In 1842 he was elected to the National Congress from the Sixth New York District. In 1846 he was the nominee of his party for the office of lieutenant-governor, with the Hon. John Young as candidate for governor. Although the head of the ticket was elected, the opposition of the anti-renters, whose plans Mr. Fish emphatically condemned, prevented his election. His successful competitor, Addison Gardner, soon resigned the office to accept the position of judge of the Court of Appeals, and Mr. Fish was elected in 1847 in his place. In 1848 Mr. Fish was elected governor of the State by a plurality of nearly 100,000, and in 1851 was chosen United States Senator and served for six years, following which he made an extended tour of Europe. While he was in the Senate, the Republican party was organized, and Governor Fish, as he was always called, became one of its loyal supporters. On the outbreak of the Civil War he took a decided stand in defense of the Union and attained a commanding influence. In 1862 President Lincoln appointed him a member of the Commission to visit the Union prisoners confined in Richmond, with a view to obtaining an exchange, which was eventually effected. He was also chairman of the Union Defense Committee. In 1869 he was called to the cabinet of President Grant, holding the high position of Secretary of State for eight years. Through his skillful and untiring efforts a peace settlement of the Alabama claims was made, through the Treaty of Washington in 1871 and the subsequent Geneva Arbitration in 1872. He became president general of the Order of the Cincinnati in 1854, and so continued until his death. He was also president of the New York Historical Society, of the Union League Club, and of the United Railroad and Canal Company of New Jersey, and from 1859 until 1893 chairman of the board of trustees of Columbia College. Governor Fish served repeatedly as a delegate from the Diocese of New York to the Triennial Conventions of the Protestant Episcopal Church and devoted much of his time to the study of and became an authority in respect of the canon law of the church. After a long, extremely active, and useful life, Mr. Fish passed away at the age of eighty-five years, on September 7, 1893, at his country seat, "Glenclyffe," near Garrison, in Putnam County, New York, leaving behind him the memory of a patriotic citizen and an upright, able and honorable man. Mr. Fish built and for more than forty years lived in a house at the corner of Second Avenue and Seventeenth Street, fronting on Stuyvesant Square, the land occupied by which public park had been given to the city by his uncle, Mr. Peter G. Stuyvesant. The site of Mr. Fish's house and garden is now that of the Maternity Hospital. His country seat, "Glenclyffe," embraced the famous "Beverley House," which had been the headquarters of General Benedict Arnold at the time of the detection of his treason and from which he had fled to the British.
Hamilton Fish married, December 17, 1836, Julia Ursin Niemcewicz Kean, daughter of Peter Philip James Kean, of Ursino, near Elizabeth, New Jersey.
Children of Hamilton Fish and Julia Kean, his wife, were:
1. Sarah Morris, born February 25, 1838; married Sidney Webster, June 7, 1860. He died May 29, 1910. She died February 16, 1923.
2. Elizabeth Stuyvesant, born March 11, 1839; married Frederic Sears Grand d'Hauteville, June 4, 1863. She died March 1st, 1864.
3. Julia Kean, born May 2, 1841; married on Dec. 8, 1868 to Col. Samuel Nicoll Benjamin. He died May 15, 1886. She died Dec. 5, 1908.
4. Susan Le Roy, born Aug. 31, 1844. She married Wm. Evans Rogers, Feb. 13, 1868. She died Jan. 26, 1909. He died March 10, 1913.
5. Nicholas, born Feb. 19, 1846; married Clemence S. Bryce, Sept. 7, 1869. He died Sept. 16, 1902.
6. Hamilton, born April 17, 1849; married 1st Emily Mann, Apr. 28, 1880. She died March 15, 1899. He married second Florence Delaplaine (Beekman) (Amsinck). She died Oct. 22, 1926.
7. Stuyvesant, born June 24, 1851; married Marian Graves Anthon, June 1st, 1876. She died May 25, 1915. He died April 10, 1923.
8. Edith Livingston, born April 30, 1856; married Hugh Oliver Northcote, June 6, 1883. She died Dec. 19, 1887. He died March 30, 1900.


Memoirs [of deceased members of The New England Historic Genealogical Society]

Stuyvesant Fish, A.M., of New York City, a Pilgrim Tercentenary member since 1920, was born in New York City 24 June 1851, the son of Hon. Hamilton and Julia (Kean) Fish, and died there, suddenly, 10 April 1923.
     His immigrant ancestor, Jonathan Fish, baptized in England 16 February 1615/16, was at Lynn, Mass., in 1637, soon afterwards went to Sandwich in the Plymouth Colony, moved thence, through Rhode Island, to Oyster Bay, Long Island, and as early as 1659 settled at Newtown, Long Island, then under the Dutch Government, where he died about 1663. His wife's name was Mary. His third son, Nathan Fish, born on Cape Cod 18 December 1650, married Judith ___, and died at Newtown, where he spent his life as a farmer, 1 August 1734. Jonathan Fish of Newtown, eldest son of Nathan and Judith [___], who was born at Newtown 11 October 1680 and died there in November 1723, married Mary ___, and in 1714 gave his homestead as a site for the Presyterian church in Newtown. His only surviving son, Capt. Samuel Fish, who was born at Newtown 24 November 1704 and died there 27 August 1767, married first Agnes Berrien; their eldest son, Jonathan Fish, who was born at Newtown 11 May 1728 and died 26 December 1779, married Elizabeth Sackett; and Col. Nicholas Fish, only son of Jonathan and Elizabeth (Sackett), who was born in New York City 28 August 1758 and died there 20 June 1833, served as an officer in the Revolution from June 1776 to the surrender of Cornwallis at Yorktown, and was appointed by President Washington in 1794 as suupervisor of the revenue, one of the highest posts in the Treasury Department. He became president of the New York Society of the Cincinnati in 1797. He married Elizabeth Stuyvesant, a great-great-granddaughter of the famous Dutch Governor of New Netherlands; and their eldest son was the well-known statesman, Hon. Hamilton Fish, who was born in New York City 3 August 1808 and died at "Glenclyffe," near Garrison, N.Y., 7 September 1893. A graduate of Columbia (A.B., 1827, A.M., 1830) and a lawyer of distinction, Hon. Hamilton Fish was a member of the United States House of Representatives (as a Whig) in the Twenty-eighth Congress (1843–1845), Lieutenant Governor of New York, 1847–1848, Governor, 1849–1850, United States Senator, 1851–1857, joining the newly-formed Republican Party before the expiration of his senatorial term, and Secretary of State under President Grant, 1869–1877. He held also other offices of importance, and was a trustee of Columbia College, 1840–1849 and 1851–1893, president of the New York Historical Society, 1867–1869, and president general of the Society of the Cincinnati, 1854–1893. He received the honorary degree of Doctor of Laws from Columbia in 1850, from Union College in 1869, and from Harvard in 1871. He married in New York City, 15 December 1836, Julia Kean, born at Ursino, near Elizabeth, N.J., 19 December 1816, died in New York City 30 June 1887, daughter of Peter and Sarah Sabina (Morris) Kean of Ursino. Their eldest son, Nicholas Fish (1846–1902), diplomatist and banker, A.B. (Columbia, 1867), LL.B. (Harvard, 1869), A.M. (Columbia, 1871), was attached to the United States Legation at Berlin as assistant secretary and secretary, 1871–1877, and was United States chargé d'affaires in Switzerland, 1877–1881, and United States minister in Belgium, 1882–1886; his son, Hamilton Fish, a soldier in the war with Spain, was killed in action in Cuba, 26 June 1898, while serving as second sergeant of Troop K, First Volunteer Cavalry (the so-called "Rough Riders"). Their second son, Hon. Hamilton Fish, A.B. (Columbia, 1869), A.M. (ib., 1872), LL.B. (ib., 1873), born at Albany, N.Y., 17 April 1849, was private secretary to his father while the latter was Secretary of State, a member of the New York Assembly for eleven years, serving as speaker of the House in 1895 and 1896, and Assistant Treasurer of the United States at New York City, 1903–1908, was elected as a Republican Representative from New York in the Sixty-first Congress (1909–1911), and is a member also of the House of Representatives of the present (the Sixty-eighth) Congress (1923–1925).
     Stuyvesant Fish, third son of Hon. Hamilton Fish, was a pupil at Mr. Haccius's school at Laney, near Geneva, Switzerland, in 1858, and his education was continued under tutors in 1859 while his parents were travelling in Europe. In 1859 he attended Mr. Elie Charlier's school in New York City, where he remained until 1861, when he entered Mr. Marlborough Churchill's school at Sing Sing, N.Y. In 1867 he was admitted to Columbia University, and received there the degree of Bachelor of Arts in 1871 and that of Master of Arts in 1874.
     Embarking on a business career, Mr. Fish in a few years gained an inportant place as a railway official and financier. In the fall of 1871 he entered the railway service as a clerk in the New York offices of the Illinois Central Railroad Company; in the following year he was appointed secretary to the president of the road; but in November 1872 he became a clerk in the banking firm of Morton, Bliss & Company of New York and later in the affiliated house of Morton, Rose & Company of London, and then from January 1875 to March 1877 he was managing clerk for Morton, Bliss & Company, with power of attorney. In 1876 he became a member of the New York Stock Exchange, retaining this membership until 1879, and he was also elected a director of the Illinois Central Railroad Company and appointed treasurer and agent for the purchasing committee of the New Orleans, Jackson & Great Northern Railroad Company. In the fall of 1877 he was made secretary of the Chicago, St. Louis & New Orleans Railroad Company, and in March 1882 was elected its vice president. In 1883 he was elected second vice president of the Illinois Central system, in 1884 was its first vice president, and in 1887 was advanced to the presidency of the company, which he held until November 1906. He was president of the Association of Railway Executives from April 1904 to April 1906, chairman of the Seventh Session of the International Railway Congress at Washington, D.C., in May 1905, and a member of the Monetary Commission established by the Indianapolis Monetary Conference of 1897. He was trustee of the Mutual Life Insurance Company of New York, 1883–1906, and the New York Life Insurance & Trust Company, and a director of the National Park Bank and a number of other financial corporations.
     In the year preceding his death Mr. Fish was a determined opponent of the method of enforcing the Eighteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States prescribed by the so-called "Volstead Act," and attacked vigorously the activities of the Anti-Saloon Leaugue.
     He was a member of many clubs and societies, among which may be mentioned the Union, St. Anthony, Metropolitan, Racquet and Tennis, Church, Sleepy Hollow, and Down Town Clubs, the Automobile Club of America, the St. Nicholas Society, the New York Historical Society, of which he was recording secretary, and the New York Genealogical and Biographical Society, of which he was a life member and vice president. In common with many other Pilgrim Tercentenary members of the New England Historic Genealogical Society he accepted an invitation to place on the walls of the stair hall of the Society's building a tablet in memory of an American forbear, and this tablet, commemorating Jonathan Fish, his immigrant ancestor, was erected in 1921.
     Mr. Fish married in New York City, 1 June 1876, Marian Graves Anthon, who was born on Staten Island, N.Y., 8 June 1853 and died 25 May 1915, daughter of William Henry Anthon, an eminent lawyer of New York City, and his wife Sarah Atwood (Meert) Anthon. Mrs. Fish was for many years a leader in New York and Newport society. Their first child, Livingston Fish, died in infancy; but their other children, who survive them, are Marian Anthon Fish, wife of Albert Zabriskie Gray, A.B. (Harvard, 1903), Stuyvesant Fish, Jr., A.B. (Yale, 1905), who married Isabell Mildred Dick and has succeeded his father in his Pilgrim Tercentenary membership in the New England Historic Genealogical Society, and Sidney Webster Fish, A.B. (Harvard, 1910, as of 1908), LL.B. (columbia, 1911), who married Olga Wiborg. Mr. Fish's city residence was at No. 25 East 78th Street, New York, and his country seat was at "Glenclyffe," near Garrison on the Hudson.
     Funeral services for Mr. Fish were held at Trinity Church in New York City on 12 April 1923, and he was buried in St. Philip's Churchyard, Garrison, where his wife, his parents, and many of his kindred are interred.

Cf. memoir of Stuyvesant Fish, with portrait, in The New York Genealogical and Biographical Record, vol. 54, pp. 329–331 (October 1923).

NEHGS Register 78 (1924): 434

 Notes & Citations

  1. The New England Historical and Genealogical Register (Boston: NEHGS), volume 78 (1924): 434-6.
  2. Charles Weygant, The Sacketts of America, "791. Hamilton Fish, b. Aug. 3, 1808, d. Sept. 7, 1893; m. Julia Kean."
  3. Stuyvesant Fish, Ancestors of Hamilton Fish and Julia Ursin Niemcewicz Kean, His Wife ((Online image. WorldVitalRecords. From the Quintin Publications Collection), 1929), pp. 48–50.
  4. NEHG Register, volume 78 (1924): 434-6, "He married in New York City, 15 December 1836, Julia Kean, born at Ursino, near Elizabeth, N.J., 19 December 1816, died in New York City 30 June 1887, daughter of Peter and Sarah Sabina (Morris) Kean of Ursino."
  5. Stuyvesant Fish, Ancestors of Hamilton Fish, pp. 48–50, has 17 December 1836.
Appears inNotable Sacketts
Sackett line6th great-grandson of Thomas Sackett the elder of St Peter in Thanet
4th great-grandson of Simon Sackett the colonist
ChartsLine 3a (American)
Generation.Tree7O.3
Last Edited11 Dec 2021
Sackett Database6324 Hon Hamilton Fish
 

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