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(IV) Nathaniel Brewster, supposed to have
been a son of Jonathan Brewster by his
first marriage, was born about 1619.
He died at Setauket, Long Island, December
18, 1690, "aged seventy years."
the ages of people as stated in those
early days are notoriously inaccurate,
and he was probably more nearly seventy-two
than seventy years of age at death.
He graduated in the first class of Harvard
College in 1642, and settled soon after
at Abby, county Norfolk, England, where
he pursued studies in theology.
Going from England to Ireland, he presented
a letter from Oliver Cromwell, to Fleetwood,
the Lord Deputy of Ireland, dated June
22, 1655. In this letter, Cromwell
said: "Use this bearer Mr.
Brewster kindly. Let him be near
you; indeed he is a very able and holy
man., Trust me and you will find
him so." he received the degree
of Bachelor of Divinity from Dublin University,
returned to America and was minister of
the First Church at Boston in 1663.
In 1665 he became the first minister at
Brookhaven, Long Island, and thus continued
thirty-five years, until his death. In
1690 as above noted. He married
Sarah, daughter of Roger Ludlow, and had
sons: 1. John. 2. Timothy, and 3.
Daniel.
(V) John,
eldest son of Nathaniel and Sarah (Ludlow)
Brewster, lived in Brookhaven, and but
little is known concerning him.
(VI) Samuel,
son of John Brewster, was born July 18,
1718, in Brookhaven, and died in New
Windsor, Orange county, New York. he was
among the original patentees of the town of
New Windsor in 1751052, and was a member of
the committee of safety during the
Revolution. He was buried in the old
graveyard at New Windsor, overlooking
Newburgh Bay. He built a saw mill, forge
and anchor shop, and assisted in forging the
chain which was stretched across the Hudson
River in the hope of checking the movement
of British vessels up that stream. In 1775
he built a residence which tradition says
sheltered Lafayette as a headquarters during
the Revolution. His first wife bore the
name of Mary. He married (second) Mary
Wood, who survived him and died at New
Windsor, February 3, 1807. Children: 1.
Samuel. 2. Timothy. 3. Hannah, married
Joseph Dubois. 4. Abigail, married Jonas
Williams. 5. Susannah, married ----------
Moores.
(VII) General
Timothy Brewster, second son of Samuel
Brewster, was born November 3, 1746, in New
Windsor, and during the Revolution removed
to Basking Ridge, New Jersey, and later to
Woodbridge, same
Page 110
State, where he occupied
large tracts of land bordering on Staten
Island Sound, now called Kill-von-Kull.
About 1812 he removed from Woodbridge,
and in 1823 he settled near Coldenham,
Orange County, New York, where he died
in 1831. He was elected elder of
the Good Will Church, and was active in
local affairs. He married (first)
October 17, 1774, Phebe Wood, of Woodhaven,
born February 17, 1754. He married
(second) Phebe Youngs, of Long Island.
Children: 1. Samuel, born
July 12, 1775. 2. John, August
15, 1777. 3. Mary, April 7,
1782, married Clark Noe, two children;
Catherine and Albert Noe, a well-known
resident of Newburg. 4. Betty,
born February 27, 1785, died in infancy.
5. Nathaniel, born October 27, 1786.
6. Timothy, mentioned below.
(VIII)
Timothy (2), son of Timothy (1) and Phebe
(Wood) Brewster, was born April 22, 1789, in
Woodbridge, and died May 2, 1836. He
settled in Newburgh in 1831, and carried on
a lumber business at the foot of Fourth
Street. After his death his family removed
to West Troy, new York, and remained two
years, returning again to Newburgh, where
they have since resided. He married,
November 9, 1813, Juliet Wright. Children:
1. Caroline, died young. 2. Mary, married
Silas Martine, and resided in Newburgh. 3.
Richard W. 4. Harriet. 5. Eugene A.,
mentioned below. 6. Caroline, all now
deceased.
(IX) Eugene
Augustus, second son of timothy (2) and
Juliet (Wright) Brewster, was born April 13,
1827, In New York city, and died December
14, 1898, in Newburgh. His education was
obtained in the public schools of Newburgh,
including the high school where he was an
assistant instructor in 1843. In the same
year he entered the law offices of Hon. John
W. Brown and was admitted to practice as an
attorney and counsellor in 1848. In 1850
he formed a partnership with Nathan Reeve,
which continued until 1855, and thereafter
practiced independently until his death. He
served several terms as a member of the
board of almshouse commissioners, was
fourteen years a member of the board of
education, and was a trustee of Washington's
Headquarters. He drew up the original
charter of the city of Newburgh; assisted in
the incorporation of the National Bank of
Newburgh, and was its vice-president. Fro
more then thirty years he was a vestryman of
St. George's (Protestant Episcopal) Church,
and was four years a warden. For many years
he was leading lawyer of Orange county, and
was prominently connected with St. Luke's
Hospital. He was among the most liberal
contributors toward the establishment and
support of that institution. He married,
June 1, 1850, Anna W., daughter of Rev. Dr.
John Brown. Of their children two now
survive, George R., mentioned below, and
Anna W., wife of Eugene W. Harter, of New
York City.
(X) George
Richard, only surviving son of Eugene A. and
Anna W. (Brown) Brewster, was born November
17, 1873, in Newburgh, where he grew up and
prepared for college at Siglar's Preparatory
college of Newburgh, after which he entered
Yale University, graduating in 1894 with the
degree of PH. B. Pursuing the study of law
in his father's office, he was admitted to
the bar in 1896, and since that time has
been successfully engaged in the practice of
his profession in his native city, and in
New York and Westchester counties. He is a
member of the Democratic, Yale and
Transportation clubs of New York, and a
director of the City club of Newburgh. He
is a warden of St. George's Church, and is a
director in numerous local corporations,
including the National Bank of Newburgh, for
which he is attorney. He is also largely
interested in the breeding of hacking
horses, and maintains for that purpose one
of the finest farms in this state.
He married,
January 18, 1899, Margaret Conley Orr,
daughter of the late James Orr, of
Newburgh.

VAN CLEFT.
Like a large proportion of the Dutch
names in new York, this is derived from
a place. The American ancestor came
from the village of Cleef in the Netherlands,
hence the name Van (from) Cleef.
The name has many other forms in the early
Dutch records of New York, such as
Van Clyf, Van Clyff, Van Cluft, Vander
Cluft--Cleef--Cleeft--Cleyft. The
name has been prominently identified with
the business interests and general development
of
Page 111
the state of New York
down to the present time.
(I) Jan Van
Cleef, born 1628, came to New Amsterdam (New
York) in 1653, and was a farmer at Gravesend
on Long Island, in 1656. In 1659 he resided
at New Utrecht in the same vicinity, and was
in Bushwick in 1664. He received a deed
December 23, 1662, from Albert Albertse
Terhune of twenty-four morgens of land in
New Utrecht, which he sold in 1669. He
purchased a pasture lot in New Utrecht,
December 27, 1677, and owned lots Nos. 6, 7,
13, and 14 at Yellow Hoek (Bay Ridge). In
1677 he was a member of the New Utrecht
church; was constable of that town in 1678,
and took the oath of allegiance to the
English government in 1687. He signed
documents, now in existence with a mark. He
was probably married before coming to New
York, as the records of the Dutch church
show that his son, Dirck, had a child
baptized in 1668. He married (second)
before march 10, 1681, Engelte, daughter of
Louwerens Pieterse. Children: 1.
Catherine, baptized October 23, 1681. 2..
Benjamin, November 25, 1683, settled in new
Jersey. 3. Joseph, settled in New Jersey.
4. Angelica. 5. Ceytie, baptized May 13,
1688. 6. Isebrant, of whom further. 7.
Nelke. 8. Cornelius, resided in New
Utrecht. 9. Dirck. 10. Rebecca. Probably
several of these were of the first marriage.
(II)
Isebrant (also spelled in the records
Ysebrant and Eyzebrand), son of Jan Van
Cleef, resided in early life in New Utrecht,
where he was grand juror in 1699. He was
undoubtedly a child of the first marriage
since h must have been of age in 1699. For
some time he resided upon, or in the
vicinity of Staten Island, where he was
witness to the baptism of a child, July 26,
1711, and ultimately settled in Monmouth
county, New Jersey. the record of all his
children has not been found. He married in
Gravesend, Jannetie Aertse Vander Bilt,
baptized September 17, 1682, in New Utrecht,
granddaughter of Jan Aertsen Vander Bilt,
immigrant ancestor of all bearing that name
in New York. Jan Aertsen Vander Bilt (from
the Bilt) came from the village of Bilt (Bilt
meaning hill) in the province of Utrecht,
Holland, as early as 1650, to New
Amsterdam. He married (first) in New
Amsterdam. February 6, 1650, Anneken
Hendricks, from Bergen, Norway, (second)
Derber Cornelis, and (third) December 16,
1681, Magdalena House, widow of Hendrick
Jansen Spier of Bergen, New Jersey. He
resided at Amsterdam, Flatbush, and lastly
at Bergen, where he owned lands in 1694, and
died February 2, 1705.
Aris, son of
Jan Aertsen Vander Bilt, born about 1651,
died after 1711. He married, October 6,
1677, Hillagonde Remsen, daughter of Rem
Janse Vanderbeek. Their children found of
record are: 1. Marretje, baptized January
25, 1716, in New York. 2. Benjamin, April
19, 1715, at Port Richmond, Staten Island.
3. Janneke, march 8, 1720, in Freehold, and
another of the name 4. Benjamin, January 7,
1724, in Freehold. It is probably that the
first Benjamin died in infancy.
(III)
Cornelius Van Cleft, undoubtedly a son of
Isebrant Van Cleef, was born about 1710, and
resided on Staten Island, where he married
Sara Marschall. No record of the marriage
or her birth or parentage can be found.
(IV) Jan, or
John, son of Cornelius and Sara (Marschall)
Van Cleft, was baptized April 26, 1736, in
the Dutch church of Port Richmond, Staten
Island, and settled about the time of his
majority in the Minnisink district, which
included parts of the present Orange county,
new York, and of New Jersey. He had five
sons and one daughter. The sons were: 1.
John. 2. Cornelius. 3. Jesse. 4. Joseph,
of whom further, and 5. Benjamin (twins).
The daughter, whose name has not been
preserved, married an Ives.
(V) Joseph,
son of John Van Cleft, was born at Minnisink,
where he lived. He was by trade a
millwright; died in 1814. He married
Elizabeth Dunning, who died January 27,
1848, and had two sons and four daughters:
1. Hector, 2. Lewis, of whom further.
3. Ann Eliza. 4. Sarah. 5. Jane. 6.
Katura.
(VI) Lewis,
son of Joseph and Elizabeth (Dunning) Van
Cleft, was born March 4, 1805, at Minnisink,
and died in July, 1870, at New Windsor,
Orange County, New York. In early life he
was employed in a woolen mill at
Phillipsburg, New York, and after his
marriage, settled on a farm of one hundred
acres, which he purchased in the town of New
Windsor, Orange County.
Page 112
there ending his days.
He married in Blooming Grove, same county,
Henrietta Woodruff Cooper, February 19,
1834. Children: 1. Henry.
2. Joseph, of whom further. 3. Sarah
E. 4. Lewis A.
(VII) Joseph (2), second son of
Lewis and Henrietta W. (Cooper) Van Cleft,
was born June 17, 1836, in new Windsor,
and attended the district schools of the
neighborhood until 1852. At the
age of sixteen years he was employed as
a clerk in a hardware store at Middletown,
New York, and was subsequently engaged
in the same capacity in New York City,
and still later in Kansas City, Missouri,
where he remained two years. In
1863 he settled at Newburgh, New York,
and established a hardware and agricultural
implement business, having a partner.
Three years later he purchased the interest
of his partner and conducted the business
alone until 1887, when he was joined by
his brother, Lewis A Van Cleft, under
the style of Joseph Van Cleft & Company.
In 1909 he purchased the interest of his
brother and soon after closed out the
business. Upon the organization
of the Columbus Trust Company of Newburgh
in 1893, Mr. Van Cleft was chosen vice-president,
and since 1897 has been president of the
institution. This is one of the
institution for promoting the business
advancement of Newburgh in whose organizations
Mr. Van Cleft was active. He has
been an extensive dealer in real estate
in the city and is now the owner of the
Van Cleft block, one of the most prominent
structures in the city. He was interested
in the building of the Palatine Hotel
in 1892-93 and a director of the company
when it was organized. Many of the
financial interests of the place owe something
to Mr. Van Cleft's aid and good business
judgment. He is a member of the
American Reformed Church and of the Newburgh
Bay and Highlands Historical Society in
whose work he takes a deep interest.
A man of genial nature, candid mind and
most courteous demeanor, Mr. Van Cleft
wins and holds friendship with many of
his contemporaries.
He married,
may 5, 1869, Edwina Storey Smith, youngest
daughter of O. M. smith, a school teacher of
prominence in the Hudson River Valley, and a
granddaughter of Jonas Storey, a well known
lawyer of early days, in Newburgh. She died
April 24, 1891, leaving give children: 1.
Josephine. 2. Edwin L. 3. Augusta M. 4.
Alberta, 5. Barclay.

REEVE.
This name is said to have been of
Welch origin. It appears on Long
Island as early as 1660, when Thomas and
James Reeves settled at Mattituck in the
present town of Southold, New York.
Many descendants from a very early date
have used the name without the final "s"
and some in Orange county, New York, use
the form Reeve. Certain it is that
those bearing the name have been people
of high respectability, much endeavor
and general worth in the communities where
they resided. The family seems to
have been very patriotic in the way for
independence. In 1776 a company
drafted out of Colonel Perry's regiment
was under the command of Captain Paul
reeves and had among its privates:
Ishmael, James, Luther, Jonathan and William
Reeves. Captain Paul Reeves held
that rank in the minutemen of Mattituck.
He died in 1822 at the age of ninety years.
(I) Thomas
Reeve arrived in Southold, New York, about
1660 and in 1667 removed to Southampton on
the south side of the island, where he died,
August 28, 1685. He married Rebecca Davis
of Southampton, probably a daughter of Faulk
Davis (a pioneer of that town) by his first
marriage. Children: 1. John. 2.
Rebecca, born March 1, 1676. 3. Thomas,
October 3, 1679. 4. Hannah, February 9,
1681. 5. Abigail, September 22, 1684.
(II) James
Reeve was undoubtedly a son of Thomas Reeve
by a former marriage, which is not recorded
in this country. He resided in Mattituck in
the town of Southold, where he died in
1692-92, leaving sons: 1. James (2) ,
mentioned below. 2. Isaac. 3. Thomas, and
4. Daniel; and daughters: 5. Hannah, and 6.
Deborah.
(III) James
(2), eldest son of James (1) Reeve, resided
in Mattituck, where he died at the age of
sixty years. Sons: 1. James. 2. Selah,
mentioned below. 3. Nathaniel. 4.
Ebenezer.
(IV) Selah,
second son of James (1) Reeve, was born
March 31, 1741, and died at Newburg, New
York, February 21, 1796.
Page 113
He was commissioned second
lieutenant of the Third Long Island Regiment,
June 27, 1776, and after the occupation
of the island by the British forces he
was obliged to flee with his family and
such of his property as could be readily
removed. These were transported
on a scow across Long Island Sound, and
he remained in Connecticut until 1784,
when he settled in the town of Newburg,
new York, about three miles north of the
then village of that name.
A plain, brown stone slab marks his resting
place in the old town cemetery.
Another slab records that his wife, Katurah,
born January 23, 1745, died January 21,
1829, surviving him almost thirty-three
years. His sons were:
1. James. 2. Selah (2),
mentioned below. 3. Joseph.
(V) Selah
(2), second son of Selah (1) and Katurah
Reeve, was born October 21, 1767, in
Southold, and died at Newburg, April 11,
1837. He resided in early life in Newburg
and served as trustee of the village. In
1797 he was a member of the fire company and
resigned the next year on his removal to
Hunting Grove on the Otterkill, where he
engaged in the milling business. In 1802 he
returned to Newburg and established a new
industry, that of manufacturing brown
earthenware. At this time he had a partner
in the person of Nathan Burling, and soon
after added crockery and glass to the wares
in which they dealt. Following this Mr.
Reeve was for many years engaged in the
freighting business. In 1814 in association
with Hiram Falls, he purchased a store, dock
and freight business at the corner of third
and Water streets, Newburg and operated the
sloops "Patriot" and "Washington". In 1815
his sons, Christopher and George, purchased
the interest of Mr. Falls, and thereafter
the business was conducted under the name of
Reeve & Sons. In 1830 Selah Reeve retired
from the business and in 1832 it passed into
the hands of his son George. Selah Reeve
was a member of the board of trustees of the
village of Newburg in 1802, 1810,
1818-19-20-21 and 1828-29. From 1818 to
1821 inclusive, he was president of the
board., He married, in 1795, at Newburg,
Elizabeth Tusten Van Duser, born 1776-7,
died May 4, 1854. There were eleven
children: 1. Millicent. 2. Christopher.
3. Chas. F. V. 4. Julia Ann. 5. George,
mentioned below, 6. Eliza. 7. Jane. 8.
Nathan. 9. Harriet M. 10. Mary E. 11.
Selah.
(VI) George,
son of Selah (2) and Elizabeth T (Van Duser)
Reeve, was born in 1800, at Newburg, and
died October 31, 1854. For many years he
was associated with his father in business
and with his brothers succeeded to the
business. For some time before his death he
lived a quiet and retired life. In 1840 he
built a mansion on Grand Street, Newburg,
which is still occupied by his eldest
daughter, Mrs. Mead. The family were
members of St. George's Episcopal Church of
which Mr. Reeve was a vestryman. He married
Caroline, daughter of Stephen Ingersoll, of
Dutchess County. Mr. and Mrs. Reeve were
the parents of three children: 1. Maria
W., mentioned below. 2. Arianna
Somerville. 3. George Henry. The last
named died at the age of twenty years.
(VII) Maria
W., daughter of George and Caroline
(Ingersoll) Reeve, is the widow of Obediah
Mead of New York City. Mr. Mead was a
member of the firm of Ralph Mead & Company,
importers of sugar and tea, of New York
City.

OLCOTT.
The Olcotts of Albany, New York, descend
in direct unbroken male succession from
Thomas Olcott, the immigrant ancestor
of the Connecticut branch of the family,
who was among the first settlers of the
town of Hartford, and one of the founders
of the trade and commerce of the colony
of Connecticut. He came from England
with the Winthrop Company in 1630.
There is reason to believe that he was
one of the "goodly company"
of men, women and children, who in June,
1635, left Newton and other settlements
in Massachusetts to plant a new colony
in the Connecticut Valley. They
came through the wilderness until they
reached the mouth of the Chicopee River,
down the banks of the Connecticut to the
spot, where in the autumn before the settlement
was begun, which is now Hartford, but
then called Suckiange. Mr. Olcott
gad been educated in England, was a merchant,
and brought with him the experience and
fruits of successful enterprise.
In common with Edward Hopkins, Richard
Lord, Wil-
Page 114
liam Whiting and others,
he engaged in trade, for which the Connecticut
was supposed to afford great facilities,
especially in the traffic of furs.
Mr. Olcott first located himself on a
lot on the east side of the public,
now State House, square. He subsequently
became the purchaser of one of the lots
assigned to Edward Hopkins in the original
distribution of the town among the first
settlers. This lot comprised the
whole square, fronting on Main Street,
and bounded by Pearl, Trumbull, and Asylum
streets. On the southeast corner
he erected a dwelling for his own occupation,
which continued in the family for several
generations. Thomas Olcott died
in 1654, aged about forty-five years.
His wife, Abigail, died May 26, 1693,
aged seventy-eight years. Children:
Thomas (2), of whom further. 2.
Samuel. 3. John, baptized
February 3, 1639. 4. Elizabeth,
December 7, 1643. 5. Hannah.
(II) Thomas
(2), son of Thomas (1) and Abigail Olcott,
was born about 1635. There seems to be no
record of his death. It appears by the land
records of Hartford that he lived to
advanced age, and until the year 1710. A
deed of land from him to his son, Thomas
Olcott (3), is dated February 14, 1719. His
wife, mary, died may 3, 1721, at Windsor,
Connecticut. Children: 1. Abigail, died
March 14, 1688, at Springfield,
Massachusetts. 2. Mary. 3. Thomas (3),
of whom further. 4. Samuel, died May 10,
1693. 5. John, drowned May 25, 1685. 6.
Timothy, born 1677, died April 5, 1754;
married (first) -------; married (second)
Mary, widow of Ebenezer Field, daughter of
Ebenezer Dudley, of East Guilford,
Connecticut, who died April 209, 1740;
married (third) Elizabeth ------, died
August 29, 1764.
(III) Thomas
(3), son of Thomas (2) and Mary Olcott, of
Hartford, has no record of birth or death.
He married, 1691, Sarah Foote, of
Wethersfield, Connecticut, who died July 24,
1756, in the eighty-sixth year of her age.
Children: 1. Abigail, died at the age of
eighteen years. 2. Sarah, born December 12,
1694; married a Mr. Dean of Plainfield,
Connecticut. 3. Mary, November 21, 1696;
married a Mr. Stoughton. 4. Cullick, April
18, 1699, died 1732. 5. Nathaniel,
September 11, 1701; married Hannah, daughter
of Nathaniel Pitkin, of East Hartford. 6.
Josiah, March 2, 1703; died February 8,
1785; married, May 15, 1740, Penelope,
daughter of Rev. Jonah Beckwith, of Lyme,
Connecticut. 7. Margaret, April 12, 1705;
married Richard Ely, of Lyme, Connecticut.
8. Hannah, August 4, 1707. 9. Elizabeth,
November 17, 1709; married Colonel John
Pitkin, of East Hartford, Connecticut,
brother of Governor William Pitkin, and
great-grandson of William Pitkin, one of the
first settlers of Hartford. 10. A child,
born 1712, died in infancy. 11. Thomas,
(4), of whom further.
(IV) Thomas
(4), son of Thomas (3) and Sarah (Foote)
Olcott, of Hartford, was born in 1713, died
May 3, 1795. He was a resident of
Stratford, Connecticut. He married (first)
1736, Sarah, daughter of John Easton, of
Hartford, who died March 30, 1756. He
married (second) November 10, 1757, Sarah,
widow of Hezekiah Thompson, of Stratford,
Connecticut, and daughter of Zachariah
Tomlinson. She died May 11, 1811, in the
eighty-ninth year of her age. Children by
first wife: 1. Josiah, born July 17, 1737,
died at age ten years. 2. Sarah, August
17, 1742, married Thomas Hawley, of
Stepney. 3. John Easton, July 24, 1749,
married Hannah Sands, of Long Island, New
York. Children by second wife: 4. Thomas,
born October 3, 1758, married (first) Mary,
daughter of Andrew Thompson, of New Haven,
Connecticut, (second) March, 1821, Lucy
Mitchell. 5. Josiah, of whom further. 6.
Hannah, January 25, 1762; married, about
1780, Beach Judson, of Stratford,
Connecticut. 7. Mary, April 3, 1763;
married, March 18, 1784, Captain Nehemiah
Gorham, who served in the Revolutionary
War. 8. Anna, 1765,; married, August 30,
1769, Isaac Bronson, of Bridgeport,
Connecticut.
(V) Josiah,
son of Thomas (4) and Sarah
(Tomlinson-Thompson) Olcott, was born at
Stratford, Connecticut, July 19, 1760, died
in Hudson, New York, January 24, 1860, in
the one hundredth year of his age. He was
educated in New England, but settled in
Hudson, Columbia county, New York, then a
thriving city with a large fleet of
sea-going vessels, largely engaged in the
whaling industry that annually brought to
the city many tons of whalebone and many
thousand barrels of whale oil. In 1785 he
engaged in the manu-
Page 115
facture of cordage with
Thomas Jenkins, built a rope-walk six
hundred feet in length, and did an extensive
business in the making and wholesaling
of rope of all kinds and sizes.
After the death of his partner he continued
the business alone. He was a shrewd
and capable business man of energy and
direct purpose. The qualities that
made his own life a success were transmitted
to his posterity, as will be seen in the
following generations. His long
and useful life ended in Hudson, and covered
a century which saw the colonies emerge
from dependencies into a great united
independent nation. The second war
with Great Britain and the war with Mexico
had terminated and he died just as the
nation was plunging into the great Civil
War.
He married Deborah, daughter of Thomas
and Deborah Worth, of Nantucket, Massachusetts,
June 7, 1794. Children: 1.
Thomas Worth, of whom further. 2.
Frederick, born January 16, 1797, died
March 29, 1816. 3. Ann Maria,
November 11, 1798; married, September
27, 1819, Richard I. Wells, of Coxsackie,
New York. 4. Alfred, died
in infancy. 5. Ophelia,, February
18, 1803, died October 10, 1839; married,
December 28, 1836, William Henry Folger,
of Hudson, New York. 6. Theodore,
May 28, 1805; married (first) May 5, 1834,
Eliza Yates; (second) October 1, 1840,
mary Jenkins. 7. Jan Matilda, March
28, 1806, died April 9, 1837. 8.
Orrin, died in infancy. 9.
Horatio Josiah, January 4, 1810; married,
September 6, 1831, Harriet M. Leonard.
10. Egbert, October 18, 1812, died
May 22, 1873; married, September 5, 1837,
Mary E. L. White. 11. Mary,
died in infancy. 12. Caroline, twin,
December, 4, 1818, died March 26, 1885.
13. Cornelia, twin, December 4, 1818,
died November 13, 1899.
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