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Fred Kingsbury.

The genealogy of the descendants of Henry Kingsbury

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urb of Troy, where she died July ^23, 1848. Dr. Streeter
died July 6, 1856.

CHILDREN.

1 Cynthia Maria, born May 7, 1832; in 1880 unm., living in Insane

Asylum, Binghamton, N. Y.

2 Helen Cornelia, born July 16, 1834; m. in Troy, October 22, 185A,

James Sims, of Troy, who died in the army, August 10, 1862;
ch.: 1 Frank; 2 Alice. Mrs. Sims and her ch. were living in
Troy in 1880.

3 Caroline, born 1838, m. March 13, 1853, Edward Seymour; she died

in New York, January 6, 1S56.






JOSEPH KINGSBURY OF NORWICH. 385

4 Julia Augusta, born August 9, 1842; m. John A. Davis; lived near

Buffalo, N. Y., and in West Troy, N. Y.; she died in Troy,
July 23, 1885.

5 John Mason Good, born January 8, 1847; living in 1880; m.

1 106 Oliver Richmond 7 Kingsbury {Oliver*, Joseph*,
Ebenezer*, Joseph 2 , Joseph'', Henry'), of New York City, married,
September 26, 1838, Susan, daughter of Alexander and Jane
(Burras) Patterson of New York City, born November 17,
1809. He was brought up in Coventry, in the family of his
grandfather, and at the age of eighteen, in March or April,
1827, moved to New York City, and lived there the rest of
his life. He entered the service of the American Tract
Society, where his uncle, Harlan Page, was engaged, from
his first coming to New York, until the end of his days; he
became Assistant Treasurer in 1834, and was Treasurer of
the Society for many years before his retirement in 1887.
He was connected with the Presbyterian Church for many
years, successively Ruling Elder in the Sixth Street, Four-
teenth Street, and Central Presbyterian Churches, and he
was several times commissioner to the General Assembly.
The following paragraph appeared in the American Mes-
senger, relating to the action taken by the American Tract
Society at the annual meeting in May, 1887, with regard
to Mr. Kingsbury :

"In accordance with the direction of the Executive Com-
mittee, at a special meeting held May 9th, the following
resolution is offered. As Mr. O. R. Kingsbury has stated
that on account of increasing age he would decline a re-elec-
tion as Treasurer, it was :

" Resolved, That the society, now assembled in annual meeting, can-
not consent to part with Mr. Kingsbury as Treasurer without placing on
record its estimate of his long and faithful services. A youth of 17, he
entered the service of the society in 1S27 in a subordinate capacity. In
1834 he was elected Assistant Secretary ; in 1S35 was added the duty
of Assistant Treasurer. He performed the duties of treasurership from
that time until the present, having received the title of Treasurer in
1870. He has been annually elected in this capacity for 53 years with
no dissenting voice. During this period there passed through the treas-
ury about $17,000,000, and so far as known not one dollar was ever lost
in connection with his department. During these 60 years he has been
out of the office' from illness but once for any length of time, and only

25



386



THE KINGSBURY FAMILY.



for three months then. Nor has he taken during these threescore years,
on an average, one week's vacation per annum. Not a little of the un-
tarnished reputation of the Society is due to his calm judgment, clear
view of financial questions, incorruptible integrity, and high Christian
character. Taking into view the multiplicity of interests involved, the
amount of money handled in unnumbered small sums, the total absence
of loss or failure in payment of notes, and the length of unbroken ser-
vice, it will be difficult to find parallels in the religious or financial insti-
tutions of the country."

In connection with this resolution Rev. Dr. William
Ormiston said that this was a most marvelous record. He
wished for Mr. Kingsbury many years yet of useful life.

Rev. William R. Eastman gave some personal reminis-
cences of the old Tract House that existed in the days of
his boyhood, when his father (Rev. O. Eastman, for fifty
years one of the Secretaries of the Society) solicited the
funds of which Mr. Kingsbury took charge. He said that it
always seemed to him that the Treasurer was dealing with
God's silver and gold, and he was glad to have this oppor-
tunity of paying his personal tribute of respect.

The resolution was then adopted unanimously by a rising
vote.

Mr. Kingsbury was elected Treasurer emeritus.

[Not a little of the untarnished reputation of the Tract
Society is due to the calm judgment, clear view of financial
questions, and incorruptible integrity of Mr. Kingsbury.
In view of the varied interests involved, the amount of
money handled in small sums, the absence of loss or failure
in payment of notes, and the length of unbroken service, it
will be difficult to find a parallel to his career in the relig-
ious or financial institutions of the country. Mr. Kings-
bury was distinguished by a practical bent of mind.
He was a man of sound sense, a retiring disposition, a
man of orderly ways, and quiet tastes. His office was to
him almost as sacred as his church, and there the responsible
duties of his earnest life were faithfully performed. Obitu-
ary Notice in N. Y. Times Dee. 72, i8S<?.~\ He died in New
York, Dec. n, 1889. His wife died June 17, 1849.

CHILDREN.

1508 Oliver Addison, born in New York August 20, 1839. c: >









JOSEPH KINGSBURY OF NORWICH. 387

1509 Howard, born in New York February 3, 1842. m->-

15T0 Angelica Patterson, born in New York August 14, 1844; died
August 30, 1846.

15 1 r Helen Louise, born in New York June 25, 1846 ; living unm. at
239 West 54th street, N. Y., in 1903.

1512 George Pomeroy, born in New York June 8, 1849 ; he is an insur-
ance inspector in New York.

II08 Diana 7 Kingsbury {Ward 6 , Joseph'', Ebenezer\ Jo-
seph*, Joseph*, Henry 1 ), married, April 19, 1838, Mathew Allyn
of Wellington, Ohio. He died April 16, 185 1. She died
August 8, 1859.

CHILDREN.

i Dwight, born in Wellington, January 20, 1839 ; died August 30, 1859.

2 Newton, born in Wellington, November 15, 1841 ; died September

22, 1861.

3 Milton, born in Wellington, December 19, 1843; killed September

19, 1864, at the battle of Cabin Creek, Kansas; shot through
the head by guerillas.

4 Alice, born in Wellington, January 29, 1845; married, December 19,

1865, John Thomas Ogden ; she died July 30/1872. Ch.: 1
Alice Emma, born September 18, 1866; 2 Ella Ruth, born
March 22, 1868; 3, Charles Robinson, born July 19, 1870.

5 Diana, born in Wellington, May 23, 1847; married, May 31, 1S69,

Eugene Smith of Chicago.

6 Ruth, born in Wellington, July 4, 1849; married, October 23, 1872,

Hiram O. Tuttle of Topeka, Kansas.

1109 Ebenezer 7 Kingsbury {Ward 6 , Joseph", Ebenezer",
Joseph*, Joseph?, HenrJ), of Pittsfield, Ohio, married, Novem-
ber 26, 1846, Climena Hitchcock, born September 2, 1826,
daughter of David and Sarah (Walter) Hitchcock. He was
a gallant soldier, and fell at the battle of Lookout Moun-
tain, November 23, 1863.

CHILDREN.

1513 Sarah Climena, born December 9, 1S47; married, December 10,

1874, Isaac H. Ball, Kansas. Ch.: 1 Ada Climena, born
September 6, 1875 ; 2 a daughter, born January 30, 18S0.

1 514 George Gad, born October 24, 1S49 ; living in Kansas, unm., 1880.

1 5 15 Ward Monroe, born January 25, 1852 ; married, July 6, 1874.

Myra Norton; resided in Pottersburg, Kansas. Ch.: Floyd
George, born July 24, 1S75.

1516 Ralph Walter, born February 13, 1854; married, October 29,

1876, Emma Warren ; resided at Yam Hill, Oregon ; removed
to Dayton, Wash. Ch. . Ida Luenna, born February 10, 1S78.



388 THE KINGSBURY FAMILY.

1517 Lewis Frank, born January 19, 1856.
151S Clarence Avery, born April 2, 1858.

15 19 Newton Ebenezer, born July 25, 1861.

1 1 10 Harlan Page 7 Kingsbury (Addison*, Joseph*, Eben-
ezer*, Joseph*, Joseph*, Henry'), of Marietta, Ohio ; married,
September it, 1862, Mary Ellen Haver, born October 2,

1835, daughter of Samuel Colwell and (Munch)

Haver of Putnam, Ohio; he lived for some years in Cairo,
but removed from there to Parkersburg, W. Va., in 1868,
and from Parkersburg to Marietta in 1878 ; occupation, lit-
erary and clerical. He died -May 29, 1899, in Marietta.

CHILDREN.

1520 Haver, born April 11, 1S65, in Cairo, 111.; unm., resides in Cincin-

nati, O., bookkeeper for a large plumbing establishment.

1521 Addison, born March 13, 1867, in Putnam, O. ; grad. Marietta

College, 188S ; is a dentist in Marietta.

nil Joseph Addison 7 Kingsbury {Addison*, Joseph",
Ebenezer*, Joseph*, Joseph*, Henry 1 ), of Pittsburg, Pa.; gradu-
ate Marietta College, 1861 — A.B. and A.M. in course; he
was a member of the Ellsworth Zouaves and of Co. B
Chicago Light Artillery during the Civil War, but saw no
field service. He married, January 18, 1866, Sarah Eliza-
beth, daughter of Samuel and Lucina (Bingham) Shipman
of Marietta, born September 29, 1839.

At the time of his marriage he was living in Cairo, Mo.;
removed from there to Marietta, then to Parkersburg, W. Va.,
thence to Cleveland; from there to Brooklyn, thence to
Pittsburg, where he now resides ; Superintendent of the
Keystone Live Stock Express Company. lie published the
" Pendulous Edition of Kingsbury Genealogy," Pittsburg,
1 90 1.

CHILDREN.

1522 Nellie, born November 22, 1S66, in Marietta, O. zz >

1523 Lizzie May, born May 12, 1870, in Marietta, O.

1524 Samuel Shipman, born September 12, 1S71, in Marietta, O.; grad.

Marietta College 1896; A.B. 1896, and A.M. 1898; Ph. D. Johns
Hopkins, 1898; Professor of Greek and French in Princeton
Preparatory School, 1S99 ; in charge of the Department of
Greek in Fairmount College, Wichita, Kansas.

1525 Grace Addison, born June 15. 1880.



JOSEPH KINGSBURY OF NORWICH. 389

1113 Henry Augustus 7 Kingsbury {Ebenezer 6 , Ebenezer 5 ,
Ebenezer*, Joseph*, Joseph' 1 , Henry'), of Oxford, N. J., and
Scranton, Pa.; married, October 6, 1857, Sarah R., daughter of
Nathaniel Britton and Rebecca (Kinney) Hutchinson, born
in Washington, N. J., March 19, 1836. He was a merchant
in Oxford, N. J., from 1857 to 1875, when he removed to
Scranton, Pa., and became General Superintendent of the
stores of the Lackawanna Iron and Coal Company. He was
an Elder in the Presbyterian church in Oxford. He died in
Scranton, March 18, 1902.

CHILDREN.

1526 Ellen Scranton, born February 3, 1859, in Oxford, N. J. =-=->-

1527 Edward Fuller, born July 10, 1861, in Oxford, N. J. s->-

1528 Frederick Hutchinson, born June 28, 1S64, in Oxford, N. J. s->-

1529 Jane Elizabeth, born November 29, 1866, in Oxford, N. J. f. .->-

1530 Henry Williston, born October 19, 1869, in Oxford. N. J.

1531 Mary, born May i, 1S71, in Oxford, N. J.

1532 Grace, born February 23, 1874, in Oxford, N. J.

1114 Edward Payson 7 Kingsbury {Ebenezer', Ebenezer",
Ebenezer*, Joseph \ Joseph 2 , Henry 1 ), a lawyer in Scranton, Pa. ;
married, February 13, 1871, Anna L. Kressler. In 18S0 he
was Secretary and Treasurer of the Scranton Steel Company
in Scranton; in 1889, Treasurer of the Lackawanna Iron and
Coal Company in Scranton, and he had been Comptroller of
the City of Scranton.

CHILDREN.

1533 Henry Williston, born December 20, 1861, in Scranton. ~ >

1534 Emma, born May 28, 1S63, in Scranton; died December 17, 1S65.

1535 Lizzie, born July iS, 1865, in Scranton; died January 21, 1868.

1536 Charles Edward, born November 3, 1S67, in Scranton; unm.

1537 Anna Kressler, born October 12, 1869, in Scranton. :->-

1538 William Payson, born December 14, 1871, in Scranton; a gradu-

ate of Long Island College Hospital, Brooklyn, N. Y.; a physi-
cian in New York City; married, April 30, 1900, Annie,
daughter of Captain Charles Beardsley, U. S. A., and Eliza-
beth Watkins, his wife, born in Brooklyn, X. Y., April 19, 1S75.

1118 Caroline NeaP Kingsbury {Ebenezer*, Ebenezer*,
Ebenezer*, Joseph 3 , Joseph', Henry 1 ), married, January 24, 1X65,
Frederick Lyman Hitchcock, born in Waterbury, Conn.,



39o



THE KINGSBURY FAMILY.



April 1 8, 1837, son of Daniel and Mary (Peck) Hitchcock.
His mother was a grandniece of General Artemas Ward,
the predecessor of Washington in command of the American
Army at Boston. He served in the Civil War, and was en-
gaged in the battles of South Mountain, Antietam, Fredericks-
burg, and Chancellorsville, and was in Florida. In 1862 he
was Adjutant of the i32d Pennsylvania Volunteers; Major,
May, 1863; twice wounded at Fredericksburg, December 13,
1862; discharged as Major, June, 1863, at the expiration of
term of service; commissioned as Lieutenant-Colonel 25th
U. S. Colored Troops, December, 1863; Colonel, May, 1865;
mustered out with regiment, December, 1865. Since the
war, a lawyer in Scranton; Ruling Elder, Second Pres-
byterian Church, Scranton, 1874; moved, in 1879, to Green
Ridge, another part of the same city, and elected to
the same office, which he still holds. Mr. Hitchcock has
always been active in church work; has been President of
Missionary Society for more than twenty years, and all his
life engaged in Sunday-school work.

CHILDREN.

1 Edwin Sherman, born November 12, 1865; resides in Pittsburg, Pa.

2 Frederick Kingsbury, born November 22, 1868; died February 13,

1872.

3 Henry Payson, born January 24, 1871; married, December 7, 1897,

Leonora Staples; resides in Scranton.

4 Elizabeth Fuller, born May 19, 1873; resides in Scranton.

5 John Partridge, born August 12, 1876; resides in Pittsburg.

6 Mary Peck, born September 27, 1879; resides in Scranton.

7 Carrie Guilford, born May 2, 1882; resides in Scranton.

1122 Abigail Harriet 7 Kingsbury (Sau/ord 6 , Eleazer\
Eleazer\ Joseph*, Joseph' 1 , Henry'), married, November 27,
1828, John B. Abbe, of Warehouse Point; removed to Iowa.
She died June 28, 1S44. He died in 1878, in Lowell, Iowa.

CHILDREN.

1 Sanford Kingsbury, died about 1875, in Colusa, California, leaving

a wife and two daughters.

2 Gilbert, died, unmarried, in California.

3 Leander, died, leaving wife and four daughters, in Lowell, Iowa.

4 Harriet, died young.

5 Ann Eliza, married, and now (1880?) living in Colusa, Cal.



JOSEPH KINGSBURY OF NORWICH. 391

1123 Henry Heath 7 Kingsbury {Sanford\ Eleazer b ,Ele-
azer*, Joseph*, Joseph*, Henry"), of Warehouse Point, Conn.,
where he was a farmer; married at Simsbury November 28,
1833, Betsey McKinney, born in Tolland, Conn., February 18,
1815, daughter of Alexander and Roxy (Talcott) McKinney,
born in Tolland, Conn., January 22, 181 7. He died January
22, 1846. His widow died October 1, 1866, in Jersey City.

CHILDREN.

1539 Edward, born September 3, 1834; married, 1868, Linda Shultz;

living in Montreal, Can., 1S90; died in Johnstown, N. Y.,
November 14, 1896; son, Frederick, born September 4, 1875.

1540 Harriet E., born March 14, 1836; married, April 3, 1854, Albert

R. Pease, of Enfield, Conn., born November, 1831; living in
Brooklyn, N. Y. ; ch.: Esther H., born July 2, 1864; married,
April 2i, 1886, George F. Gutzler, of Brooklyn, N. Y.

1541 William H., born July 22, 1839; married, 1874, Josephine Keiser;

lived in South Nonvalk; *died May 9, 1900; ch.: Bertha, born
1875. His widow was living in Saugatuck, Conn., 1901.

1 125 Nancy Jane 7 Kingsbury (Sanford*, Eleazer*, Elea-
zer*, Joseph*, Joseph", Henry 1 ), married in St. John's Church,
East Windsor, April 10, 1855, George B. Barnes, of Ware-
house Point, Conn., son of Levi and Orpha (Barker) Barnes,
born in Southampton, Mass., December 16, 1829. They
lived for many years in Hartford, but had been living in
Warehouse Point for some time when she died there, April
20, 1885.

CHILDREN.

1 George Kingsbury, born September 15, 1856; died December 9, 1859.

2 William Henry, born April 18, 1861; m., November 19, 1898, Alice B.

Newins, b. April 13, 1S65; ch.: 1, Frances Newins, b. Sep-
tember 24, 1900; res. Riverhead, L. I.; engaged in the busi-
ness of cigar manufacturing.

3 Frederick Joseph, born January 29, 1863; married, November 18,

1885, Alice Morgan Johnson, born in Detroit, Mich., March 3,
1863, daughter of Waldo M. and Jane E. (Heath) Johnson;
resides in Warehouse Point, Conn.; ch.: 1 Morgan Kingsbury,
b. April 4, i3S7; 2 Frederick Heath, b. September 4, 18S8;
3 William Bartlett, b. November 11, TS93; 4 George Kings-
bury, b. September 16, 1895.

4 Arthur Coggeswkll, born September 11, 1S68; unm.; res. New-

Brighton, Staten Island.

5 Mary Kingsuury, born March 28, 1S71 ; unm.

1127 Russell H. 7 Kingsbury [Horatio G.\ E/eazer", Elea-
zer*, Joseph*, Joseph 12 , Henry'), of Oxford, N. C, where he set-



392



THE KINGSBURY FAMILY.



tied about 1830; married, June 13, 1848, Elizabeth Gilliam
of Oxford, N. C. He moved to Waco, Texas, January, 1873 ;
died there June 14, 1890. His widow lives in Waco (1902).

CHILDREN.

1542 Henry Peeble, born April 25, 1S50. ss >

1543 William Gilliam, born January 7, 1852; lives at Waco, Texas;

married Miss De Cordova.

1544 Katherine Sophia, born August , 1854 s >

1545 Charles Peeble, born about 1856 ; died young.

1546 Russell H. A., born January 7, 1859 ; is a lawyer in Waco, unra.

1547 Frederick Hervey, born about 1S63 ; is a lawyer in Waco, unm.

1548 Percy, born about 1865 ; died young.

1549 Elizabeth, born 1871 ; died young, at Waco.

1550 Lillie, born about 1861 ; died at the age of six years, at Oxford.

1128 Brevet Brigadier-General Charles Peeble 7
Kingsbury (Horatio Gates*, Eleazer*, Eleazer\ Joseph*,
Joseph" 1 , Henry 1 ), was appointed to West Point from North
Carolina; graduated in 1840, second in a class which num-
bered among its members the future Generals William
Tecumseh Sherman and George H. Thomas. He was
assigned by his own choice to the Ordnance Department. In
August, 1845, he was directed to report to General Taylor,
then commanding the army of occupation at Corpus Christi,
Texas. At Buena Vista he rendered valuable service, and
continued in Mexico during the war as ordnance officer.
The first account of the battle of Buena Vista received in
this country, appeared in the New Orleans Delta, and was
written by him. It was a remarkably brilliant descrip-
tion, and was prepared the night after the battle, in his tent,
with a powder keg for his table. His first promotion was
for gallant and meritorious conduct at the battle of Buena
Vista. He was promoted to Captain in 1854 for fourteen
years' continuous service. The outbreak of the Civil War
found him on duty at Richmond, Va., and he was soon
after appointed principal assistant in the Ordnance Office.
After the news was received that Virginia had seceded, and
that Governor Letcher was about to attempt the capture of
the Harper's Ferry Armory, the Secretary of War, at the
suggestion of General Scott, immediately ordered Captain
Kingsbury to the command of the Armory. From the gen-
eral feeling manifested by the operatives and citizens it soon



JOSEPH KINGSBURY OF NORWICH. 393

became evident that any attempt to defend the post by the
few regulars in garrison must necessarily fail, and to baffle
the object of the enemy the destruction of the 15,000 mus-
kets and rifles in the armory was the only alternative. This
contingency was not contemplated at Washington when
Captain Kingsbury received his instructions from General
Scott, but there was no time for deliberation, and with a full
sense of the responsibility he incurred, he determined, if pos-
sible, to destroy the Armory and its contents. When the
report came that Letcher's raiders were within three miles
of the place the order was given to apply the match ; the
shops and machinery fell into the hands of the enemy, but the
arms, for which the expedition was principally undertaken,
were destroyed. Captain Kingsbury, however, came near
losing his life at the hands of an infuriated mob, but the
manly interposition of a prominent citizen saved him from
becoming the first victim of the Civil War, and enabled him
to escape from his captors. He was afterwards ordered to
report to General McClellan, and he served as Chief of Ord-
nance of the Army of the Potomac through the Peninsular
Campaign ; in 1863 he was promoted to Major ; in 1865 he
was made a Brevet Brigadier-General for gallant and meri-
torious services in the Civil War. After the siege of York-
town, and the Seven Days' Battles before Richmond, General
Kingsbury's health broke down, and he was forced to retire
from active service for a time. Later he was appointed
to Rock Island Arsenal, and began the buildings there, and
was transferred from them to the Watertown Arsenal near
Boston. Here, his health failing, he was retired on his own
application, and made Brooklyn, N. Y., his home. General
Kingsbury was always a student and a writer. He was the
author of an "Elementary Treatise on Artillery and In-
fantry," and was at one time a contributor to magazines
and journals. An interesting incident of General Kings-
bury's life is that he was the first man to urge General
Grant to re-enter the army at the breaking out of the war.
After this conversation the two men did not meet again
until General Grant visited the Watertown Arsenal as Presi-
dent. His first greeting as he shook hands was : " Well,
Kingsbury, you see I followed your advice." General



394 THE KINGSBURY FAMILY.

Kingsbury died in Brooklyn, N. Y., December 25, 1878.
Generals Hancock, Slocum, Casey, Newton, Mitchell, and
McKeever acted as pall bearers, and the coffin was borne
by eight private soldiers in uniform from the force stationed
at Governor's Island. At the funeral services his pastor,
the Rev. Dr. Cuyler, made the following remarks :

He spoke of the character of the deceased, and alluded to
the fact that for eight years he had been a member of that
church, and had always been one of its most devoted mem-
bers. The pastor alluded especially to the regularity with
which General Kingsbury attended upon the services of the
church. He was always present at the weekly prayer meet-
ing when he was in the city, and, although his native mod-
esty and diffidence did not permit him to speak, yet his
conduct and character was a bright and shining example.
In speaking of this phase of General Kingsbury's religious
character, Dr. Cuyler alluded to the incident which occurred
recently at one of the prayer meetings of the church, when
in company with General Kingsbury there were Generals
Casey and Patrick, and all three occupied the same seat —
three white-haired soldiers — who had been companions in
arms in Mexico and elsewhere, and were likewise comrades
in the service of Christ. All were West Point graduates,
and it was not an uncommon sight to be seen in their prayer
meetings. Both Generals Casey and Patrick spoke upon
the occasion with force and power.

The speaker also alluded to the hearty and aggressive
loyalty of the deceased, and his firm adherence to the repub-
lic in her hour of danger. Although his domestic ties were
on the side of the South, and many of his best and earliest
friends were in that region, it seemed only to have the effect
of increasing his love for his country. The deceased was a
man strong in his convictions upon every point, and this
trait of his character shows with especial brilliancy in all
matters connected with his religious life. He was firm and
well grounded in his faith, and had a reason for it, the same
as he did in everything else upon which he formed an
opinion.

Dr. Cuyler spoke at length upon the connection of the
deceased with the church which he loved so well and where
he was so constant an attendant. His life afforded a bright



JOSEPH KINGSBURY OF NORWICH. 395

example and was worthy of all emulation by those whom
he left behind.

He married, June 1, 1848, Mary McMillan of Fayette-
ville, N. C; she died in Brooklyn, N. Y., April 23, 1888.

1132 Barton Price 7 Kingsbury {John Clark 6 , Eleazer",
Eleazer*, Joseph 3 , Joseph*, Henry'), married at Newark, N. Y.,
September, 1852, Cornelia N. Brown, as his second wife;
she died in Chillicothe, O., May 3, 1858. He was cashier of
the Ross County Branch State Bank of Ohio, and after-
wards cashier in one of the national banks of Chillicothe, O.
His health failed in 1875, an d he was living at the Good
Samaritan Hospital, Cincinnati, O. (1880).

CHILD.

1551 Frank, born in Chillicothe, May 2, 1853 ; living in Tombstone,
Arizona, at one time.

1 136 Theodore Bryant' Kingsbury {Russell* , Eleazer\
Eleazer \ Joseph \ Joseph \ Henry '), of Wilmington, N. C. He
was educated at the Oxford Academy, the Bingham School,
and was at the Lovejoy Military Academy, Raleigh, for
two years before entering the University of North Carolina.
He married, March, 185 1, Sallie Jones Atkinson, born May


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