Dr. Henry Sewall1
M, b. 25 May 1855, d. 8 July 1936
Dr. Henry Sewall|b. 25 May 1855\nd. 8 Jul 1936|p440.htm#i1375|Rev. Thomas Sewall|b. 28 Apr 1818\nd. 11 Aug 1870|p462.htm#i1052|Julia Elizabeth Waters|b. 29 Sep 1826|p552.htm#i1369|Dr. Thomas Sewall|b. 16 Apr 1786\nd. 10 Apr 1845|p462.htm#i91|Mary Choate|b. 3 Oct 1792\nd. 28 Mar 1855|p86.htm#i1048|Freeborn G. Waters|d. b 1870|p552.htm#i16645||||

Dr. Henry Sewall
(1855-1936)
(1855-1936)
Dr. Henry Sewall and his wife, Isabel, bought a house at 1380 Vine St. in 1904. Dr. Sewall had struggled with illness as a child and because of this he was extremely interested in helping children develop. Dr. Sewall and Isabel willed their home to the cause of helping children with special needs. Dr. Sewall died in 1936 at the age of 81. The Sewall Child Development center was founded in 1944.6
"For a physician who is a lover of wisdom is the equal of a god."
No tribute to our late colleague, Dr. Henry Sewall, could be better penned than this quotation for Hippocrates. The passing of one who gave his life to the science and art of medicine rather than to enrichment is no common event.
It was his instinct to seek to answer the "wherefore" of every "why" and in his presence one could almost sense the emanations of intellect. The spirit to seek out Nature's secrets had existed in a grandfather, Thomas Sewall, who was graduated in medicine at Harvard in 1812. The literary talent, which enriched his publications, came from his father, a clergyman, known as the "silver-tongued Sewall." Such inherited traits were enhanced by the lifelong help and devotion of his wife, with whom we now share her great sorrow.
It has been well written that "Perhaps there is no science which requires so penetrating an intellect, so much talent and genius, so much force of mind, so much acuteness and memory, as the science of medicine. The high character of a perfect master of the art must be the result of a combination of a multiplicity of qualifications, which must be partly natural, and partly acquired and improved by laborious cultivation." It was such a combination which made of Henry Sewall a great physician, scholar and gentleman.
In early life it was the good fortune of Henry Sewall to work under two great physiologists - Michael Foster in England, and Carl Ludwig in Germany. Of Michael Foster, Sewall wrote, "He despised the foible of vanity and had no patience with mercenary inclinations." In Carl Ludwig, Sewall admired the dogged determination to complete an experiment, and he later wrote, "It set me to thinking perhaps it was this sort of thing that made Ludwig preeminent." It is easy to see the influence of these great men in the life of Henry Sewall, and it was such an influence he passed on successfully to another generation.
Pondering over Jenner's vaccination, Pasteur discovered that the inoculation of attenuated organisms of chicken cholera resulted in immunization. Pondering over Pasteur's publications Henry Sewall was led to investigate the possible immunization of pigeons to rattlesnake venom. It was known that pigeons were peculiarly sensitive to rattlesnake venom. First determining the minimum fatal dose, Henry Sewall, in 1887, by repeated inoculations of sub-minimal doses successfully immunized pigeons to this poisonous protein. These experiments were recognized in Europe as the foundation on which the development of antitoxins was built. Physicians from all parts of the world have stood in reverence before the tablet erected at Ann Arbor to commemorate the experiments of Henry Sewall, the former Professor of Physiology at the University of Michigan.
Pulmonary tuberculosis brought Henry Sewall to Denver, and the courage with which he met this affliction and its complications and the triumph over typhoid, with rib necrosis, is well known to his friends. No better basis for medical practice exists than a training in physiology, and the Ph.D. of Johns Hopkins of 1879 became an M.D. of the University of Denver in 18S9. The man of thought became the medical practitioner and thus was fulfilled another Hippocratic maxim: "For many cases need, not reasoning, but practical help."
The practice of medicine was illuminated by the spirit of investigation, and in heart disease and in tuberculosis the research spirit of Henry Sewall prevailed. For many years he worked in and inspired the research department of the National Jewish Hospital.
To have been president of the Colorado State Medical Society, of the National Tuberculosis Association, of the American Climatological and Clinical Association, and of the Association of American Physicians; to have been the recipient of the Kober medal of the Association of American Physicians and of the Trudeau medal of the National Tuberculosis Association - such are honors in recognition of worth which few physicians can attain.
As a practitioner, and as a consultant in internal medicine, his consideration, understanding, gentleness, and effort will live in the medical history of Colorado just as his scientific spirit will live in the medical history of the world.
A splendid portrait of Dr. Sewall by McClymont hangs on the walls of the library of the Denver County Medical Society.
Born in Winchester, Va., May 25, 1855, Dr. Henry Sewall died from coronary thrombosis in Denver, July 8, 1936.
The desire of all physicians will be to join in the words of the greatest of poets:
"Quiet consummation have;
And renowned be thy grave! "
And renowned be thy grave! "
Dr. Gerald Webb writing in Transactions of the American Clinical and Climatological Association. 1936; 52: xlviii-1.
Citations
- [S5] William Darcy McKeough, McKeough Family Tree.
- [S206] 1920 US Census.
- [S268] Ephraim Orcutt Jameson, The Choates in America, p. 195.
- [S208] 1900 US Census.
- [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "# 33815047."
- [S359] Burke Aaron Hinsdale, History of the University of Michigan, p. 265.
Gen. Henry Sewall1,2
M, b. 19 July 1793, d. 17 June 1864
Gen. Henry Sewall|b. 19 Jul 1793\nd. 17 Jun 1864|p440.htm#i900|Rev. Jotham Sewall|b. 1 Jan 1760\nd. 3 Oct 1850|p446.htm#i88|Jenny Sewall|b. 28 Sep 1768\nd. 26 Feb 1842|p442.htm#i754|Henry Sewall|b. 26 Mar 1727\nd. 2 Nov 1792|p439.htm#i82|Abigail Titcomb|b. 20 Oct 1718\nd. 27 Jul 1797|p519.htm#i83|Henry Sewall|b. 7 Feb 1740\nd. 24 Jan 1795|p439.htm#i662|Mary Stinson|b. 10 Apr 1744\nd. 22 Jan 1777|p494.htm#i750|
Gen. Henry Sewall was born on 19 July 1793 in Chesterville, Franklin County, Maine.3,4,5 He was the son of Rev. Jotham Sewall and Jenny Sewall.1 Gen. Henry Sewall married Mary Witherell, daughter of Major Obadiah Witherell and Mary (Unknown), on 15 January 1816 in Norridgewock.6 Gen. Henry Sewall appears on the census of 1850 at Chesterville.4 Gen. Henry Sewall was living in Augusta.7 He died on 17 June 1864 in Chesterville, Franklin County, Maine, at the age of 70.8
Children of Gen. Henry Sewall and Mary Witherell
- Mary Jane Sewall+9 b. 5 Jan 1817, d. 9 Nov 1891
- Otis Henry Sewall+9 b. 13 Nov 1819, d. 20 Jan 1912
Citations
- [S5] William Darcy McKeough, McKeough Family Tree.
- [S22] Rev. Jotham Sewall, A memoir of Rev. Jotham Sewall of Chesterville, Maine., index.
- [S22] Rev. Jotham Sewall, A memoir of Rev. Jotham Sewall of Chesterville, Maine., p. 55.
- [S106] Maine Families in 1790, Vol. 7 p. 454.
- [S89] LDS Record, Vital records, 1802-1892 (1918) Chesterville (Maine). Town Clerk.
- [S106] Maine Families in 1790, Vol. 7 p. 455.
- [S22] Rev. Jotham Sewall, A memoir of Rev. Jotham Sewall of Chesterville, Maine., p. 366.
- [S106] Maine Families in 1790, Vol. 7 p. 456.
- [S153] Charles Nelson Sinnett, The Sewall genealogy, p. 69.
General Henry Sewall
M, b. 24 October 1752, d. 4 September 1845
General Henry Sewall|b. 24 Oct 1752\nd. 4 Sep 1845|p440.htm#i85|Henry Sewall|b. 26 Mar 1727\nd. 2 Nov 1792|p439.htm#i82|Abigail Titcomb|b. 20 Oct 1718\nd. 27 Jul 1797|p519.htm#i83|Nicholas Sewall|b. 1 Jun 1690\nd. 25 Nov 1735|p454.htm#i55|Mehitable Storer|b. 10 May 1696|p495.htm#i56|Joseph Titcomb|b. 27 Jul 1700\nd. 1722|p525.htm#i54|Sarah Batchelder|b. 21 Dec 1697\nd. 3 Feb 1790|p30.htm#i52|
- Charts
- Descendants of Henry Sewell of Coventry (#1)
Descendants of Henry Sewell of Coventry (#2)
Descendants of Henry Sewell of Coventry (#3)
General Henry Sewall was born on 24 October 1752 in Newtown, York, Maine, (Titcomb p. 226 gives 1762).1,2,3,4 He was the son of Henry Sewall and Abigail Titcomb. General Henry Sewall was baptised on 29 October 1752 at York, Maine.5 He married firstly Tabitha Sewall, daughter of John Sewall and Mary Sayward, on 9 February 1786 at Georgetown.6 General Henry Sewall married secondly Rachel Crosby, daughter of Simon Crosby and Sarah Sewall, on 30 June 1811 at Salem, Massachusetts, first cousins. There is a record of their marriage intentions dated 18 May 1811 in the Augusta Vital Records.7,8,4 General Henry Sewall married thridly Elizabeth Lowell, daughter of John Lowell and Elizabeth Scollay, on 9 September 1833 at Augusta, Maine.6,4 General Henry Sewall died on 4 September 1845 in Augusta, Maine, at the age of 92 also recorded on 11th.9,6,4
Before the Revolution he was a mason by trade; corporal in Prescott’s Massachusetts regiment, May 1775. The following sketch for his service in the Revolutionary War appears in Massachusetts Soldiers and Sailors of the Revolutionary War (13:1018).
Henry Sewall, Falmouth (also given York). Capt. David Bradish’s co; billeting allowed from date of enlistment, May 12, 1775, to July 8, 1775; credited with 57 days allowance; also, 4th Sergeant, Capt. David Bradish’s co., Col. Edmund Phinney’s (31st) Regt; company return endorsed “Octr 6th 1775;” also, order for bounty coat or its equivalent in money dated Cambridge Camp, Dec. 15, 1775; also, Ensign, Capt. Tobias Fernald’s (2d) co., Col. Edmund Phinney’s Regt; muster roll of field, staff, and commissioned officers, dated Garrison at Fort George, Dec. 8, 1776; appointed Jan. 1, 1776; reported re-engaged Nov. 13, 1776, as 1st Lieutenant in Col. Brewer’s Regt; also, Captain, Col. Sprout’s Regt; Continental Army pay accounts for service from Jan. 1, 1777, to Dec. 31, 1779; reported as serving 29 mos. 25 days as Lieutenant, 6 mos. 5 days as Captain; also, 1st Lieutenant, Col. Samuel Brewer’s Regt; pay abstract of officers for rations from Jan. 1, 1777, to March 31, 1777, dated Boston; said Sewall credited with 180 rations; also, Lieutenant, 12th Mass. Regt. commanded by Maj. Tobias Fernald; return dated Boston, of officers who were in actual service and who had not been absent subsequent to May -, 1777, except by leave of proper authority; also, 1st Lieutenant, Capt. Donnell’s co., Col. Brewer’s Regt; return dated Camp at Valley Forge, Jan. 22, 1778; residence, York; also, letter from Lieut. Col. Samuel Carlton to the Board of War, at Boston, dated West Point, Dec. 27, 1778, asking that clothing be delivered said Sewall, Lieutenant, and others, officers of (late) Col. Brewer’s Regt; also, Col. Carlton’s (late Brewer’s) Regt; return of officers for clothing, dated Boston, Feb. 2, 1770; also, Captain, 12th Mass. Regt; list of officers; commissioned June 25, 1779; also, Lieutenant, (late) Col. Brewer’s (12th) Regt; return of officers for the moiety of money due July 15, 1779; reported Commissary of Musters; also, Captain, 12th Mass. Regt; list of settlements of rank of Continental officers, dated West Point, made by a Board held for the purpose and confirmed by Congress Sept. 6, 1779; commissioned June 25, 1779; also, pay roll of Capt. Sylvanus Smith’s co., Col. Timothy Bigelow’s (15th) Regt., for Oct., 1779, signed by said Sewall, Commissary of Musters, sworn to at Peekskill; also, Captain; return of officers belonging to (late) 12th Mass. Regt. commanded by Lieut. Col. Ebenezer Sprout, “now in actual service,” dated Boston, Jan. 17, 1781; also, list of men belonging to said Sewall’s co., 2d Mass. Regt., who had enlisted for the war, as returned by said Sewall, Captain, dated West Point, Jan. 28, 1781.
Henry transferred to 2nd Massachusetts, 3 May 1782. He was the Major and Aide-de-Camp to Major-General Heath from 19 May 1779 to June 1783.
In 1783 he settled at Fort Western, Hallowell, Maine; was Town Clerk of Hallowell, then of Augusta for thirty-five years. He served as Clerk of the District Court of Maine, 1789 until 1818. He was the Register of Deeds of Kennebec County from 1799 to 1816. And was a Major-General, 8th Division, Massachusetts (Maine) State Militia. The diary he kept while in the Army has been printed in the Maine Farmer (August - November, 1872).
Henry was an Original Member of the Massachusetts Society of the Cincinnati from 1783 until 1845. He later served as the Vice President of the Society in 1845. Henry was granted a Bounty Land Warrant 26 June 1789, and applied for a soldier’s pension 30 March 1819. His widow Elizabeth applied for a widow’s pension 1 March 1835, age 75 yrs.1,2
Before the Revolution he was a mason by trade; corporal in Prescott’s Massachusetts regiment, May 1775. The following sketch for his service in the Revolutionary War appears in Massachusetts Soldiers and Sailors of the Revolutionary War (13:1018).
Henry Sewall, Falmouth (also given York). Capt. David Bradish’s co; billeting allowed from date of enlistment, May 12, 1775, to July 8, 1775; credited with 57 days allowance; also, 4th Sergeant, Capt. David Bradish’s co., Col. Edmund Phinney’s (31st) Regt; company return endorsed “Octr 6th 1775;” also, order for bounty coat or its equivalent in money dated Cambridge Camp, Dec. 15, 1775; also, Ensign, Capt. Tobias Fernald’s (2d) co., Col. Edmund Phinney’s Regt; muster roll of field, staff, and commissioned officers, dated Garrison at Fort George, Dec. 8, 1776; appointed Jan. 1, 1776; reported re-engaged Nov. 13, 1776, as 1st Lieutenant in Col. Brewer’s Regt; also, Captain, Col. Sprout’s Regt; Continental Army pay accounts for service from Jan. 1, 1777, to Dec. 31, 1779; reported as serving 29 mos. 25 days as Lieutenant, 6 mos. 5 days as Captain; also, 1st Lieutenant, Col. Samuel Brewer’s Regt; pay abstract of officers for rations from Jan. 1, 1777, to March 31, 1777, dated Boston; said Sewall credited with 180 rations; also, Lieutenant, 12th Mass. Regt. commanded by Maj. Tobias Fernald; return dated Boston, of officers who were in actual service and who had not been absent subsequent to May -, 1777, except by leave of proper authority; also, 1st Lieutenant, Capt. Donnell’s co., Col. Brewer’s Regt; return dated Camp at Valley Forge, Jan. 22, 1778; residence, York; also, letter from Lieut. Col. Samuel Carlton to the Board of War, at Boston, dated West Point, Dec. 27, 1778, asking that clothing be delivered said Sewall, Lieutenant, and others, officers of (late) Col. Brewer’s Regt; also, Col. Carlton’s (late Brewer’s) Regt; return of officers for clothing, dated Boston, Feb. 2, 1770; also, Captain, 12th Mass. Regt; list of officers; commissioned June 25, 1779; also, Lieutenant, (late) Col. Brewer’s (12th) Regt; return of officers for the moiety of money due July 15, 1779; reported Commissary of Musters; also, Captain, 12th Mass. Regt; list of settlements of rank of Continental officers, dated West Point, made by a Board held for the purpose and confirmed by Congress Sept. 6, 1779; commissioned June 25, 1779; also, pay roll of Capt. Sylvanus Smith’s co., Col. Timothy Bigelow’s (15th) Regt., for Oct., 1779, signed by said Sewall, Commissary of Musters, sworn to at Peekskill; also, Captain; return of officers belonging to (late) 12th Mass. Regt. commanded by Lieut. Col. Ebenezer Sprout, “now in actual service,” dated Boston, Jan. 17, 1781; also, list of men belonging to said Sewall’s co., 2d Mass. Regt., who had enlisted for the war, as returned by said Sewall, Captain, dated West Point, Jan. 28, 1781.
Henry transferred to 2nd Massachusetts, 3 May 1782. He was the Major and Aide-de-Camp to Major-General Heath from 19 May 1779 to June 1783.
In 1783 he settled at Fort Western, Hallowell, Maine; was Town Clerk of Hallowell, then of Augusta for thirty-five years. He served as Clerk of the District Court of Maine, 1789 until 1818. He was the Register of Deeds of Kennebec County from 1799 to 1816. And was a Major-General, 8th Division, Massachusetts (Maine) State Militia. The diary he kept while in the Army has been printed in the Maine Farmer (August - November, 1872).
Henry was an Original Member of the Massachusetts Society of the Cincinnati from 1783 until 1845. He later served as the Vice President of the Society in 1845. Henry was granted a Bounty Land Warrant 26 June 1789, and applied for a soldier’s pension 30 March 1819. His widow Elizabeth applied for a widow’s pension 1 March 1835, age 75 yrs.1,2
Children of General Henry Sewall and Tabitha Sewall
- William/Billy Sewall6 b. 31 Dec 1786, d. 18 Jun 1787
- Abigail Sewall+ b. 2 Apr 1788, d. Aug 1872
- Charles Sewall+6 b. 13 Nov 1790, d. 28 Jan 1872
- Maria Sewall10 b. 11 May 1792, d. 4 Oct 1795
- Susan Sewall+10 b. 4 Apr 1794 or 5 Apr 1794, d. 14 Jun 1872
- William Sewall+2 b. 17 Jan 1797, d. 7 Apr 1846
- Maria Sewall11 b. 26 Mar 1798, d. 10 Oct 1798
- Mary Sewall11 b. 23 Oct 1799, d. 15 Mar 1825
Citations
- [S24] Sarah Elizabeth Titcomb, Early New England People, p. 226.
- [S46] Various contributors, Daughters of the American Revolution, Vol. 13 p. 226.
- [S83] NEHGR, Vol. 112 p. 23. Vital Records of York, Maine.
- [S149] NEHGS Database, , Vital Records of Augusta, ME.
- [S106] Maine Families in 1790, Vol. 7 p. 451.
- [S106] Maine Families in 1790, Vol. 7 p. 452.
- [S89] LDS Record, FHL Number 761209+.
- [S106] Maine Families in 1790, Vol. 1 p. 59.
- [S22] Rev. Jotham Sewall, A memoir of Rev. Jotham Sewall of Chesterville, Maine., p. 21.
- [S106] Maine Families in 1790, Vol. 7 p. 453.
- [S106] Maine Families in 1790, Vol. 7 p. 454.
Rev. Henry Sewall1,2
M, b. 1614, d. 16 May 1700
Rev. Henry Sewall|b. 1614\nd. 16 May 1700|p440.htm#i10|Henry Sewall|b. 8 Apr 1576\nd. Mar 1656/57|p439.htm#i5|Anne Hunt|d. 1614/15|p249.htm#i6|Henry Sewall|b. 1544\nd. 16 Apr 1628|p439.htm#i1|Margaret Grazebrook|b. c 1556\nd. 1629|p202.htm#i2|||||||
Rev. Henry Sewall was born in 1614 in Manchester ? He was the son of Henry Sewall and Anne Hunt. Rev. Henry Sewall was christened on 25 June 1615 at Manchester Cathedral.3 He emigrated in 1634 "Sent by his father to New England 1634, with Net Cattel and Provisions sutable for a new Plantation, sailing on the Elizabeth and Dorcas. Mr Cotton would have had him settle in Boston; but in regard of his Cattel he chose to goe to Newbury, where his father soon followed him."4,5 He married Jane Dummer, daughter of Stephen Dummer and Alice Archer, on 25 March 1646 at Newbury, Essex County; the service being conducted by Richard Saltonstall.4,6 In 1647 he returned with his family, to England and three years later in 1650, he was presented to the living of North Baddesley in Hampshire.7 In 1658 or early 1659, and leaving his wife and children at Baddesley, Henry again sailed for Massachusetts carrying a letter from Richard Cromwell concerning the inheritance of his father's estate. Soon after his arrival he learned of Richard Cromwell's abdication, the restoration of the monarchy and the inevitable collapse of Puritan predominance. He summoned his family to New England.8 Rev. Henry Sewall died on 16 May 1700 in Newbury (Titcomb gives 16 March 1700).9,10 He was buried in the burying ground of the First Parish Church, Newbury, Massachusetts.11
Children of Rev. Henry Sewall and Jane Dummer
- Hannah Sewall+ b. 10 May 1649, d. 11 Nov 1699
- Chief Justice Samuel E. Sewall+ b. 28 Mar 1652, d. 1 Jan 1729/30
- John Sewall+ b. 10 Oct 1654, d. 8 Aug 1699
- Major Stephen Sewall+ b. 19 Aug 1657, d. 17 Oct 1725
- Jane Sewall+ b. 25 Oct 1659, d. 29 Jan 1716/17
- Anne Sewall+ b. 3 Sep 1662, d. 18 Dec 1706
- Mehitable Sewall+ b. 8 May 1665, d. 8 Aug 1702
- Dorothy Sewall+ b. 29 Oct 1668, d. 17 Jun 1752
Citations
- [S3] Nina Moore Tiffany, Samuel E. Sewell: a memoir, p.2.
- [S9] Carol Berkin, Jonathan Sewell, p.2.
- [S89] LDS Record, The Registers of the cathedral church of Manchester (Lancashire). Axon, Ernest.
- [S25] Samuel Sewall, Diary of Samuel Sewall (1973 ed.), p. 1073.
- [S26] Hector Livingston Duff, Sewells in the New World, p.16.
- [S24] Sarah Elizabeth Titcomb, Early New England People, p. 215.
- [S26] Hector Livingston Duff, Sewells in the New World, p.20.
- [S26] Hector Livingston Duff, Sewells in the New World, p.22-23.
- [S5] William Darcy McKeough, McKeough Family Tree.
- [S26] Hector Livingston Duff, Sewells in the New World, p.23.
- [S29] Henry Sewall Webster, Thomas Sewall, p.4.
Rev. Henry Sewall1
M, b. 1772, d. 9 June 1850
Rev. Henry Sewall|b. 1772\nd. 9 Jun 1850|p440.htm#i755|Henry Sewall|b. 7 Feb 1740\nd. 24 Jan 1795|p439.htm#i662|Mary Stinson|b. 10 Apr 1744\nd. 22 Jan 1777|p494.htm#i750|Capt. Samuel Sewall|b. 9 Apr 1688\nd. 28 Apr 1769|p458.htm#i51|Sarah Batchelder|b. 21 Dec 1697\nd. 3 Feb 1790|p30.htm#i52|John Stinson|b. 1714\nd. 1801|p494.htm#i5677|Jane Huston|b. 1720\nd. 1812|p251.htm#i5678|
Rev. Henry Sewall was born in 1772.2 He was the son of Henry Sewall and Mary Stinson.1 Rev. Henry Sewall married Esther Minot Moody on 5 October 1794 in Bath, Kennebec, Maine. Rev. Henry Sewall was ordained on 7 October 1812 at Hebron "he enjoyed the satisfaction of seeing his brother in law, Henry Sewell ordained."3 He died on 9 June 1850 in Sangerville, Piscataquis County, Maine.4,5 He was buried in Knowlton Mills Cemetery, Sangerville, Piscataquis County, Maine.5
Children of Rev. Henry Sewall and Esther Minot Moody
- Minot Sewall6 b. 1795, d. 1795
- Mary Sewall6 b. 19 Nov 1796, d. 1825
- Henry Sewall7 b. c 1799, d. 15 Oct 1865
- Esther Sewall8 b. 29 Mar 1802
- Samuel Moody Sewall+6 b. 4 May 1805, d. 2 Jun 1872
- Rev. William Stinson Sewall+6 b. 19 Jun 1807, d. 27 Sep 1884
Citations
- [S5] William Darcy McKeough, McKeough Family Tree.
- [S62] William Richard Cutter, New England Families.
- [S22] Rev. Jotham Sewall, A memoir of Rev. Jotham Sewall of Chesterville, Maine., p. 199.
- [S205] Newspaper, Bangor Daily Whig & Courier, (Bangor, ME) Saturday, June 22, 1850.
- [S34] Unverified internet information, http://ftp.rootsweb.ancestry.com/pub/usgenweb/me/… [August 2008].
- [S153] Charles Nelson Sinnett, The Sewall genealogy, p. 21.
- [S34] Unverified internet information, http://ftp.rootsweb.com/pub/usgenweb/me/piscataquis/…
- [S265] Allyn Stanley Kellogg, Elder John White and his descendants, p. 120.
Henry Augustus Sewall1
M, b. 25 February 1871
Henry Augustus Sewall|b. 25 Feb 1871|p440.htm#i17232|Otis Henry Sewall|b. 13 Nov 1819\nd. 20 Jan 1912|p455.htm#i12945|Mary S. Keep|b. 22 Jun 1839\nd. 1 Feb 1914|p265.htm#i17231|Gen. Henry Sewall|b. 19 Jul 1793\nd. 17 Jun 1864|p440.htm#i900|Mary Witherell|b. 11 Jul 1786\nd. 17 Jun 1864|p575.htm#i10260|||||||
Henry Augustus Sewall was born on 25 February 1871 in Wilton, Maine.1 He was the son of Otis Henry Sewall and Mary S. Keep.2 Henry Augustus Sewall married Ella (Unknown) circa 1900.2 Henry Augustus Sewall and Ella (Unknown) both appear on the census of 1900 at Frankin, Maine, where their occupations are given as woolen weavers. They are living with his parents.2 Henry Augustus Sewall married thirdly Alice B. (Unknown) circa 1907.3 Henry Augustus Sewall and Alice B. (Unknown) appear on the census of 1910 at Wilton, Maine.3 Henry Augustus Sewall and Alice B. (Unknown) appear on the census of 1930 at Wilton, Maine, they were both working asweavers in a wollen mill.4
Child of Henry Augustus Sewall and Alice B. (Unknown)
- Clara Mae Sewall3 b. c 1907
Henry Clay Sewall1
M, b. 28 July 1830
Henry Clay Sewall|b. 28 Jul 1830|p440.htm#i12471|Dummer Sewall|b. 22 Aug 1783\nd. 27 Oct 1848|p430.htm#i12464|Sarah (or Sallie) Wilson|b. 1 Feb 1799\nd. b Aug 1838|p570.htm#i12468|Dummer Sewall|b. 7 Jan 1761\nd. 11 Feb 1846|p430.htm#i741|Jenny Dunning|b. 9 Mar 1763\nd. 26 May 1852|p147.htm#i835|||||||
Henry Clay Sewall was born on 28 July 1830.2 He was the son of Dummer Sewall and Sarah (or Sallie) Wilson.1
Henry D. Sewall1
M, b. circa 1805, d. 19 September 1821
Henry D. Sewall|b. c 1805\nd. 19 Sep 1821|p440.htm#i17999|Dr. Robert Sewall|b. 1765\nd. 16 Dec 1820|p456.htm#i4441|Mary (Polly) Brent|b. c 1772\nd. 23 Jul 1822|p50.htm#i4444|Nicholas L. Sewall|b. c 1720\nd. 1798|p454.htm#i4438|Mary Darnall||p122.htm#i4440|William Brent||p50.htm#i4635||||
- Charts
- Descendants of Henry Sewell of Coventry (#1)
Descendants of Henry Sewell of Coventry (#2)
Descendants of Col. Henry Sewall of Maryland (#1)
Descendants of Col. Henry Sewall of Maryland (#2)
Henry D. Sewall was born circa 1805.2 He was the son of Dr. Robert Sewall and Mary (Polly) Brent.1 Henry D. Sewall died on 19 September 1821 in Poplar Hill, Prince George's County, Maryland, in the notice of his death he is described as third son of the late Robert Sewall.1,3 He was buried in Poplar Hill Cemetery, Clinton, Prince George's County, Maryland.2
Citations
- [S205] Newspaper, Daily National Intelligencer, (Washington, DC) Tuesday, September 25, 1821.
- [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "Find A Grave Memorial# 23623080."
- [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "# 23623080."
Henry Devereaux Sewall1
M, b. 21 August 1786, d. 8 June 1846
Henry Devereaux Sewall|b. 21 Aug 1786\nd. 8 Jun 1846|p440.htm#i121|Chief Justice Samuel Sewall LL.D.|b. 11 Dec 1757\nd. 8 Jun 1814|p459.htm#i105|Abigail Devereaux|b. 17 Jun 1766\nd. 22 Feb 1847|p132.htm#i106|Samuel Sewall|b. 2 May 1715\nd. 12 Jan 1771 or 19 Jan 1771|p457.htm#i74|Elizabeth Quincy|b. 15 Oct 1729\nd. 15 Feb 1770|p383.htm#i75|Dr. Humphrey Devereaux|b. 11 Dec 1730\nd. 3 Dec 1773|p132.htm#i833|Anna Henchman|b. 18 May 1742|p226.htm#i9571|
Henry Devereaux Sewall was born on 21 August 1786 in Marblehead, Massachusetts. He was the son of Chief Justice Samuel Sewall LL.D. and Abigail Devereaux. Henry Devereaux Sewall married Mary Catherine Norton, daughter of Birdsey Norton, on 22 January 1816 in Bloomfield, New Jersey, In the wedding announcement the groom is described as being of the house of Hurd & Sewall, New York.2,3 Henry Devereaux Sewall died on 8 June 1846 in Watertown, New York, at the age of 59.4,5
At the age of 18 he started as a clerk in the counting house, in Boston, of his uncle, Joseph Sewall, the head of the house of Sewall, Salisbury & Co., then the principal dry goods importing and jobbing firm in New England. In 1807 the firm detailed their clerks, Henry Devereux Sewall and Arthur Tappan, the latter a brother of the junior partner in the firm, to go to Portland, in the district of Maine, and open a branch store under the firm name of Tappan & Sewall; but after doing business in Portland for two years they became discouraged by the ill effects produced by Jefferson's embargo, and in 1809 transferred the mercantile establishment to Montreal. There they were quite successful. Merchants and traders in Central and Northern New York were at that time among the principal customers of the Canadian capital city. It was there that Mr. Sewall formed acquaintanceships with Watertown merchants that shaped his course later in his career. The War of 1812 coming on, all Americans residing in Canada were required either to swear allegiance to the British Crown or to quit the country. Being patriots, and the descendants of patriots, the young traders chose the latter alternative, although to the ruin of their business, and in 1813 broke up their establishment. Mr. Tappan went directly to New York, becoming afterwards the leading dry goods merchant in that city, and a distinguished philanthropist. Mr. Sewall devoted his attention to the settling of matters of the late firm, and the collection of their outstanding debts.
Mr. Sewall's father dying in 1814 he spent a considerable part of that year in settling the estate, and early in 1815 established himself in New York in the foreign shipping and commission business, in partnership with John R. Hurd. This business proving but moderately remunerative, Mr. Hurd accepted an offer in 1823 to take the presidency of a marine insurance company in New York, and Mr. Sewall, under the advice of his uncle Joseph, the merchant in Boston, undertook a commission agency in New York in partnership with Edmund Q. Sewall, a son of Joseph, for the sale of domestic goods in connection with the foreign commission business. Joseph Sewall at that time had the agency in Boston of most of the few manufactories of cotton and woolen goods in New England, and through his intervention the firm of H. D. & E. Q. Sewall became the first in New York to undertake a similar agency in the latter market. It was thus that Mr. Sewall established an intercourse with Gilbert & Sigourney, the managers of the cotton factory at Watertown, and the latter concern becoming largely indebted to the New York house, the larger part of this indebtedness was finally transferred to property in and about Watertown.
In the financial crash of 1827 Mr. Sewall's firm in Boston, being compelled to succumb, carried down with them the house in New York of H. D. & E. Q. Sewall; and the junior partner, in the latter, dying, and the outlook for future business in New York seeming discouraging, Mr. Sewall concluded to remove with his family to Watertown, and managed the property there acquired through the intercourse with Gilbert & Sigourney, which firm also had been compelled by the extreme financial pressure of the time to withdraw from active business. He had likewise a view to the further extension of manufacturing at Watertown, and had always nourished a preference for a country life. Mr. Sewall, with the valuable assistance of those excellent men, well known to old citizens of Watertown, John Sigourney and Josiah W. Baker, carried on the old cotton factory and store from 1829 to 1834, when, the charter expiring, the factory and appurtenances were sold. In 1828-29 he constructed the dam on the Black River at the upper end of his island, built his residence on the island, then a beautiful spot, constructed or bought and afterwards sold a saw-mill and a tannery on the north side of the north branch, opposite the island, a paper mill and a machine shop on the lower point of the island on the north branch, a flouring-mill on the main branch, south side, just below the island, an extensive saw-mill at Dexter all between 1829 and I833; and in I834, with the assistance of New York and Boston capital, he erected an extensive woolen factory on the south side of the river opposite the island, and in 1834 to '35 and '36 built several brick stores on the east side of Factory Square, as well as a number of dwelling houses on Factory street, and in the neighborhood of the woolen-mills; and during the same period contributed largely to the erection of the first academy in the village (of which the late Judge Mullin was the first principal), and in 1832-33 furnished the greater part of the means for and himself attended to the construction and fitting up of the first Episcopal Church in the village, the predecessor of the present church on Court street. Later he built another flouring mill, below the woolen factory. Mr. Sewall, in connection with Merrill Coburn held, in 1833 the contract for furnishing the ties and sleepers for the Utica & Schenectady Railroad, the first railroad in the state of any length (the only previous ones being the short Mohawk & Hudson, and the Harlem, not going north of Harlem at that time) and, to carry out the contract, put up the extensive saw-mills at Dexter, and, as the sleepers were required to be of yellow pine, the contractors secured all there was of that timber along the Black River. The flood of 1833 swept all the logs into the lake at heavy loss to the contractors. From 1835 to 1843 Mr. Sewall was chiefly occupied with the business of the woolen factory, which, partly from want of sufficient skill in the manufacture of the fine goods for which the works were designed, partly from insufficiency of funds, and partly from the reduction of the tariff, did not prove ultimately profitable.
In the early spring of 1843 Mr. Sewall was badly injured by the upsetting of the Utica stage coach while on a journey to the eastward, from which time his health failed, and his business career practically closed, his death in June, 1846, being caused by the paralysis resulting from the injury. Child's Gazetteer of Jefferson County, City of Watertown.
At the age of 18 he started as a clerk in the counting house, in Boston, of his uncle, Joseph Sewall, the head of the house of Sewall, Salisbury & Co., then the principal dry goods importing and jobbing firm in New England. In 1807 the firm detailed their clerks, Henry Devereux Sewall and Arthur Tappan, the latter a brother of the junior partner in the firm, to go to Portland, in the district of Maine, and open a branch store under the firm name of Tappan & Sewall; but after doing business in Portland for two years they became discouraged by the ill effects produced by Jefferson's embargo, and in 1809 transferred the mercantile establishment to Montreal. There they were quite successful. Merchants and traders in Central and Northern New York were at that time among the principal customers of the Canadian capital city. It was there that Mr. Sewall formed acquaintanceships with Watertown merchants that shaped his course later in his career. The War of 1812 coming on, all Americans residing in Canada were required either to swear allegiance to the British Crown or to quit the country. Being patriots, and the descendants of patriots, the young traders chose the latter alternative, although to the ruin of their business, and in 1813 broke up their establishment. Mr. Tappan went directly to New York, becoming afterwards the leading dry goods merchant in that city, and a distinguished philanthropist. Mr. Sewall devoted his attention to the settling of matters of the late firm, and the collection of their outstanding debts.
Mr. Sewall's father dying in 1814 he spent a considerable part of that year in settling the estate, and early in 1815 established himself in New York in the foreign shipping and commission business, in partnership with John R. Hurd. This business proving but moderately remunerative, Mr. Hurd accepted an offer in 1823 to take the presidency of a marine insurance company in New York, and Mr. Sewall, under the advice of his uncle Joseph, the merchant in Boston, undertook a commission agency in New York in partnership with Edmund Q. Sewall, a son of Joseph, for the sale of domestic goods in connection with the foreign commission business. Joseph Sewall at that time had the agency in Boston of most of the few manufactories of cotton and woolen goods in New England, and through his intervention the firm of H. D. & E. Q. Sewall became the first in New York to undertake a similar agency in the latter market. It was thus that Mr. Sewall established an intercourse with Gilbert & Sigourney, the managers of the cotton factory at Watertown, and the latter concern becoming largely indebted to the New York house, the larger part of this indebtedness was finally transferred to property in and about Watertown.
In the financial crash of 1827 Mr. Sewall's firm in Boston, being compelled to succumb, carried down with them the house in New York of H. D. & E. Q. Sewall; and the junior partner, in the latter, dying, and the outlook for future business in New York seeming discouraging, Mr. Sewall concluded to remove with his family to Watertown, and managed the property there acquired through the intercourse with Gilbert & Sigourney, which firm also had been compelled by the extreme financial pressure of the time to withdraw from active business. He had likewise a view to the further extension of manufacturing at Watertown, and had always nourished a preference for a country life. Mr. Sewall, with the valuable assistance of those excellent men, well known to old citizens of Watertown, John Sigourney and Josiah W. Baker, carried on the old cotton factory and store from 1829 to 1834, when, the charter expiring, the factory and appurtenances were sold. In 1828-29 he constructed the dam on the Black River at the upper end of his island, built his residence on the island, then a beautiful spot, constructed or bought and afterwards sold a saw-mill and a tannery on the north side of the north branch, opposite the island, a paper mill and a machine shop on the lower point of the island on the north branch, a flouring-mill on the main branch, south side, just below the island, an extensive saw-mill at Dexter all between 1829 and I833; and in I834, with the assistance of New York and Boston capital, he erected an extensive woolen factory on the south side of the river opposite the island, and in 1834 to '35 and '36 built several brick stores on the east side of Factory Square, as well as a number of dwelling houses on Factory street, and in the neighborhood of the woolen-mills; and during the same period contributed largely to the erection of the first academy in the village (of which the late Judge Mullin was the first principal), and in 1832-33 furnished the greater part of the means for and himself attended to the construction and fitting up of the first Episcopal Church in the village, the predecessor of the present church on Court street. Later he built another flouring mill, below the woolen factory. Mr. Sewall, in connection with Merrill Coburn held, in 1833 the contract for furnishing the ties and sleepers for the Utica & Schenectady Railroad, the first railroad in the state of any length (the only previous ones being the short Mohawk & Hudson, and the Harlem, not going north of Harlem at that time) and, to carry out the contract, put up the extensive saw-mills at Dexter, and, as the sleepers were required to be of yellow pine, the contractors secured all there was of that timber along the Black River. The flood of 1833 swept all the logs into the lake at heavy loss to the contractors. From 1835 to 1843 Mr. Sewall was chiefly occupied with the business of the woolen factory, which, partly from want of sufficient skill in the manufacture of the fine goods for which the works were designed, partly from insufficiency of funds, and partly from the reduction of the tariff, did not prove ultimately profitable.
In the early spring of 1843 Mr. Sewall was badly injured by the upsetting of the Utica stage coach while on a journey to the eastward, from which time his health failed, and his business career practically closed, his death in June, 1846, being caused by the paralysis resulting from the injury. Child's Gazetteer of Jefferson County, City of Watertown.
Children of Henry Devereaux Sewall and Mary Catherine Norton
- Henry Foster Sewall+6 b. 31 Oct 1816, d. 30 Apr 1896
- Frederick N. Sewall7 b. 24 Sep 1818, d. 8 Nov 1819
- Mary Sewall+6 b. 15 Jul 1820, d. May 1901
- Dr. John Gallison Sewall+6 b. 2 Nov 1822, d. 18 Jan 1874
- Ann Elizabeth Sewall+6 b. 4 Aug 1824, d. 3 Jun 1888
- Edmund Quincy Sewall+6 b. 1 Jul 1826, d. 21 Aug 1892
- Grace Sewall8 b. 4 Oct 1828, d. 6 Jan 1837
- Frank Devereux Sewall6 b. 25 Feb 1833, d. 15 Nov 1852
- Walter Devereux Sewall+6 b. 28 Aug 1837, d. 29 Mar 1928
Citations
- [S24] Sarah Elizabeth Titcomb, Early New England People, p. 222.
- [S83] NEHGR, Vol. 74 p. 203.
- [S205] Newspaper, Boston Weekly Messenger. 8 Feb 1816.
- [S205] Newspaper, New-Hampshire Sentinel, 1 July 1846.
- [S205] Newspaper, The Boston Daily Atlas, (Boston, MA) Saturday, June 27, 1846.
- [S5] William Darcy McKeough, McKeough Family Tree.
- [S89] LDS Record, IGI Family Group Record.
- [S153] Charles Nelson Sinnett, The Sewall genealogy, p.11.
Henry Devereaux Sewall1
M, b. July 1844
Henry Devereaux Sewall|b. Jul 1844|p440.htm#i13007|Henry Foster Sewall|b. 31 Oct 1816\nd. 30 Apr 1896|p440.htm#i953|Sarah Allyne Rich|b. c 1818\nd. 12 Aug 1883|p395.htm#i13005|Henry D. Sewall|b. 21 Aug 1786\nd. 8 Jun 1846|p440.htm#i121|Mary C. Norton|b. 6 Jun 1797\nd. 30 Dec 1840|p342.htm#i122|||||||
Henry Devereaux Sewall was born in July 1844 in New York.3 He was the son of Henry Foster Sewall and Sarah Allyne Rich.2 Henry Devereaux Sewall was baptised on 22 August 1847 at Cohasset, Norfolk County, Massachusetts.1 He married Maria C. (Unknown) circa 1865.3 Henry Devereaux Sewall and Maria C. (Unknown) appear on the census of 1880 at Flushing, Queens, New York, where he is listed as a clerk in the Customs House.4
Child of Henry Devereaux Sewall and Maria C. (Unknown)
- Sarah E. Sewall4 b. Oct 1869
Henry Devereux Sewall1,2
M, b. 3 July 1849, d. after 1910
Henry Devereux Sewall|b. 3 Jul 1849\nd. a 1910|p440.htm#i978|Rev. Charles Chauncy Sewall|b. 10 May 1802\nd. 22 Nov 1886|p426.htm#i131|Amy Peters|b. 9 Dec 1802\nd. 15 Aug 1872|p362.htm#i132|Chief Justice Samuel Sewall LL.D.|b. 11 Dec 1757\nd. 8 Jun 1814|p459.htm#i105|Abigail Devereaux|b. 17 Jun 1766\nd. 22 Feb 1847|p132.htm#i106|William Peters||p363.htm#i969|Mary Ellis||p157.htm#i9001|
Henry Devereux Sewall was born on 3 July 1849 in Medfield, Norfolk County, Massachusetts.3 He was the son of Rev. Charles Chauncy Sewall and Amy Peters.1 Henry Devereux Sewall appears on the census of 1850 where he is listed as Henry Langley Sewell, the name was subsequently changed to Henry Devereux though the 1860 census calls him Emery D. He married Ella Maria Clark, daughter of Charles C. Clark and Amy P. (Unknown), on 4 February 1880 in Boston, Massachusetts, they had seven children, four of whom were still living at the time of the 1900 Census.4,5 Henry Devereux Sewall and Ella Maria Clark appear on the census of 22 June 1900 at Westboroough, Worcester County, Massachusetts, his occupation is recorded as hat blocker.6 Henry Devereux Sewall died after 1910.
Children of Henry Devereux Sewall and Ella Maria Clark
- Ethel Isabella Sewall2 b. 15 Aug 1880, d. 29 Nov 1911
- Ellen F. Sewall2 b. Aug 1883
- Charles C. Sewall2 b. Dec 1885
- Henry J. Sewall2 b. Apr 1888
Citations
- [S5] William Darcy McKeough, McKeough Family Tree.
- [S87] Kate Hogenson, Communication from K. Hogenson.
- [S130] Massachusetts Vital Records, Massachusetts Vital Records, 1841–1910.
- [S89] LDS Record, Unsourced marriage record M019746.
- [S208] 1900 US Census, MA WORCESTER WESTBOROUGH.
- [S208] 1900 US Census, Westborough District 1703, Worcester, Massachusetts.
Henry Edwin Sewall1
M, b. 22 August 1848, d. 1 August 1925
Henry Edwin Sewall|b. 22 Aug 1848\nd. 1 Aug 1925|p440.htm#i1235|Rev. Rufus King Sewall|b. 22 Jan 1814\nd. 17 Apr 1903|p457.htm#i1006|Anne Elizabeth Whitehurst|b. 11 May 1819\nd. 29 Jun 1855|p564.htm#i11257|Rufus K. Sewall|b. 10 Dec 1787\nd. 30 Apr 1880|p457.htm#i850|Phoebe Merrill|b. Apr 1793\nd. 14 Jan 1865|p318.htm#i1005|||||||
-Note: Martin-St Johns-Dade County FlArchives Biographies.....Sewall, Henry Edwin 1848 -
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Copyright. All rights reserved.
http://www.usgwarchives.org/copyright.htm
http://www.usgwarchives.org/fl/flfiles.htm
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File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by:
Joy Fisher sdgenweb@yahoo.com February 11, 2008, 9:30 pm
Author: B. F. Johnson (1909)
Henry Edwin Sewall
Henry Edwin Sewall of Sewall's Point, Fla., though reared in another State, is a
native of Florida, having been born at St. Augustine, on August 22, 1848. His
father, Rufus King Sewall, was a lawyer of note and the author of many popular
historical works bearing upon the State of Maine. His mother's maiden name was
Anna E. Whitehurst, who first married a Hanson, and in 1843, being a widow, was
married to Rufus King Sewall, of which marriage there were five children. The
Sewall family in this country traces its ancestry to Henry Sewall, who came from
England to Ipswich, Mass., in 1634, and he in turn was descended from Henry
Sewall, who was Mayor of Coventry, England, in 1589 and 1606. It is said that
the family ancestry can be traced back to the days of the Norman Conquest in
England. Samuel Sewall, the first of the family in Maine, lived at York. One of
his sons, Henry, was the father of another Samuel, who was pastor of the
Congregational Church in Edgecomb in 1807. This Samuel was the father of Rufus,
who in turn was the father of Rufus King Sewall, who was the father of Henry E.
In 1846 Rufus King Sewall and his wife removed to Florida, but only remained
until 1849 when they returned to Maine where Henry E. grew up and obtained his
education in the public schools of that State. In 1865 the lad entered the
Merchant Marine Service, which he followed until 1876. His last voyage was
around the world in the ship Benjamin Sewall of Boston. His uncle, Capt. Egbert
T. Sewall, in command of the barque, Istria, was lost at sea off Cape Hatteras,
on June 11, 1868. In 1876 Mr. Sewall left the sea and engaged in the wholesale
retail coal business in New York, under the firm name of H. E. Sewall and
Company. The business was successful and in 1889 he sold out and came to
Sewall's Point, Fla., to perfect the titles of the Hanson grant, which was
finally accomplished by decree of the United States Court, after fourteen years
of litigation. In 1890 he took an active part in county affairs and in 1894
represented Dade county in the Legislature for two years. Since that time he has
devoted his attention to the development of the section where he lives. He has
held the place of Postmaster at Sewall's Point since May 12, 1891, and also
served as County Commissioner in 1893.
On December 23, 1873, he married Miss Abbie E. Thomas, a daughter of Seymour
and Mary (Evans) Thomas, of Nicholas, N. Y.
Captain Sewall is a Congregationalist and a Democrat. He is commodore of the
Gilbert Bar Yacht Club, a life member of the Kane Lodge, No. 454, F. & A. M., of
New York City, and a charter member of the Mid Rivers Country Club. He is an
active member of the Pineapple Growers' Association and the Pineapple League.
For Florida Captain Sewall thinks that the most important question is good
roads, with cheaper and better transportation, which will encourage the
immigration needed and build up the State. In his reading he is very partial to
historical works and rates very highly such current periodicals as The
Independent and other magazines of that class. As a matter of interest in his
career, it may be mentioned that at the time the barque Istria was lost, as
above stated, he was the second mate and was one of the four saved, washed
ashore on wreckage after being in the water 9 hours.
Captain Sewall comes of that New England stock which has written such
marvelous pages upon the history of our land. Their sturdiness of character is
illustrated by the strength of their convictions. A man reared in Maine who is a
lifetime Democrat does not need any other testimonial as to the rigidity of his
principles, and the Sewall family of that State are prominent in that respect.
One-third of the Hanson tract of land to which he perfected titles after such a
hard struggle has been in his family since the year 1823, or just four years
after Florida was acquired from Spain. During his life as a sailor he voyaged
around the world several times on sailing ships, making very long trips, and
acquired a world experience, which has been valuable to him in later life. Since
settling at Sewall's Point and perfecting the titles to the lands he has been
engaged in building up a select colony at that place, and the government
engineers have but recently recommended a very large appropriation for
improvements to be made in that vicinity. It is but just to state that to his
efforts mainly are due the splendid improvements already made at Santa Lucia
inlet, and Captain Sewall believes that if the present contemplated improvements
are carried out that the Santa Lucia inlet will be the gateway for freight to
the west coast of Florida. A man of affairs and capable in business he occupies
in the community in which he lives that commanding position to which his merits
and his labors entitle him.
Additional Comments:
Extracted from:
FLORIDA EDITION
MAKERS OF AMERICA
AN HISTORICAL AND BIOGRAPHICAL WORK BY AN ABLE CORPS OF WRITERS
VOL. III.
Published under the patronage of
The Florida Historical Society, Jacksonville, Florida
ADVISORY BOARD:
HON. W. D. BLOXHAM
COL. FRANK HARRIS
HON. R. W. DAVIS
SEN. H. H. McCREARY
HON. F. P. FLEMING
W. F. STOVALL
C. A. CHOATE, SECRETARY
1909
A. B. CALDWELL
ATLANTA, GA.
COPYRIGHT 1909
B. F. JOHNSON
Photo: http://www.usgwarchives.org/fl/martin/photos/bios/sewall70gbs.jpg
File at: http://files.usgwarchives.org/fl/martin/bios/sewall70gbs.txt
This file has been created by a form at http://www.genrecords.org/flfiles/
File size: 5.9 Kb. Henry Edwin Sewall was born on 22 August 1848 in St. Augustine, Florida.3,4 He was the son of Rev. Rufus King Sewall and Anne Elizabeth Whitehurst.2,1 Henry Edwin Sewall married Abbie Evans Thomas, daughter of Seymour Thomas and Mary Evans, on 23 December 1873.3 Henry Edwin Sewall appear on the census of 1880 at New York (Manhattan), New York, where he is listed as a coal dealer.5 He died on 1 August 1925 in Florida at the age of 76 4 and is buried in All Saints Cemetery, Jensen Beach, Martin County, Florida.6 "In 1889, Henry Edwin Sewall and his wife arrived and gave the Sewall's Point peninsula [Florida] its name. They built their home on the riverbank and in 1891 established a post office with a loading dock at the southern tip of Sewall's Point. The dock became a regular stopping place for Indian River travelers."7
************************************************
Copyright. All rights reserved.
http://www.usgwarchives.org/copyright.htm
http://www.usgwarchives.org/fl/flfiles.htm
************************************************
File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by:
Joy Fisher sdgenweb@yahoo.com February 11, 2008, 9:30 pm
Author: B. F. Johnson (1909)
Henry Edwin Sewall
Henry Edwin Sewall of Sewall's Point, Fla., though reared in another State, is a
native of Florida, having been born at St. Augustine, on August 22, 1848. His
father, Rufus King Sewall, was a lawyer of note and the author of many popular
historical works bearing upon the State of Maine. His mother's maiden name was
Anna E. Whitehurst, who first married a Hanson, and in 1843, being a widow, was
married to Rufus King Sewall, of which marriage there were five children. The
Sewall family in this country traces its ancestry to Henry Sewall, who came from
England to Ipswich, Mass., in 1634, and he in turn was descended from Henry
Sewall, who was Mayor of Coventry, England, in 1589 and 1606. It is said that
the family ancestry can be traced back to the days of the Norman Conquest in
England. Samuel Sewall, the first of the family in Maine, lived at York. One of
his sons, Henry, was the father of another Samuel, who was pastor of the
Congregational Church in Edgecomb in 1807. This Samuel was the father of Rufus,
who in turn was the father of Rufus King Sewall, who was the father of Henry E.
In 1846 Rufus King Sewall and his wife removed to Florida, but only remained
until 1849 when they returned to Maine where Henry E. grew up and obtained his
education in the public schools of that State. In 1865 the lad entered the
Merchant Marine Service, which he followed until 1876. His last voyage was
around the world in the ship Benjamin Sewall of Boston. His uncle, Capt. Egbert
T. Sewall, in command of the barque, Istria, was lost at sea off Cape Hatteras,
on June 11, 1868. In 1876 Mr. Sewall left the sea and engaged in the wholesale
retail coal business in New York, under the firm name of H. E. Sewall and
Company. The business was successful and in 1889 he sold out and came to
Sewall's Point, Fla., to perfect the titles of the Hanson grant, which was
finally accomplished by decree of the United States Court, after fourteen years
of litigation. In 1890 he took an active part in county affairs and in 1894
represented Dade county in the Legislature for two years. Since that time he has
devoted his attention to the development of the section where he lives. He has
held the place of Postmaster at Sewall's Point since May 12, 1891, and also
served as County Commissioner in 1893.
On December 23, 1873, he married Miss Abbie E. Thomas, a daughter of Seymour
and Mary (Evans) Thomas, of Nicholas, N. Y.
Captain Sewall is a Congregationalist and a Democrat. He is commodore of the
Gilbert Bar Yacht Club, a life member of the Kane Lodge, No. 454, F. & A. M., of
New York City, and a charter member of the Mid Rivers Country Club. He is an
active member of the Pineapple Growers' Association and the Pineapple League.
For Florida Captain Sewall thinks that the most important question is good
roads, with cheaper and better transportation, which will encourage the
immigration needed and build up the State. In his reading he is very partial to
historical works and rates very highly such current periodicals as The
Independent and other magazines of that class. As a matter of interest in his
career, it may be mentioned that at the time the barque Istria was lost, as
above stated, he was the second mate and was one of the four saved, washed
ashore on wreckage after being in the water 9 hours.
Captain Sewall comes of that New England stock which has written such
marvelous pages upon the history of our land. Their sturdiness of character is
illustrated by the strength of their convictions. A man reared in Maine who is a
lifetime Democrat does not need any other testimonial as to the rigidity of his
principles, and the Sewall family of that State are prominent in that respect.
One-third of the Hanson tract of land to which he perfected titles after such a
hard struggle has been in his family since the year 1823, or just four years
after Florida was acquired from Spain. During his life as a sailor he voyaged
around the world several times on sailing ships, making very long trips, and
acquired a world experience, which has been valuable to him in later life. Since
settling at Sewall's Point and perfecting the titles to the lands he has been
engaged in building up a select colony at that place, and the government
engineers have but recently recommended a very large appropriation for
improvements to be made in that vicinity. It is but just to state that to his
efforts mainly are due the splendid improvements already made at Santa Lucia
inlet, and Captain Sewall believes that if the present contemplated improvements
are carried out that the Santa Lucia inlet will be the gateway for freight to
the west coast of Florida. A man of affairs and capable in business he occupies
in the community in which he lives that commanding position to which his merits
and his labors entitle him.
Additional Comments:
Extracted from:
FLORIDA EDITION
MAKERS OF AMERICA
AN HISTORICAL AND BIOGRAPHICAL WORK BY AN ABLE CORPS OF WRITERS
VOL. III.
Published under the patronage of
The Florida Historical Society, Jacksonville, Florida
ADVISORY BOARD:
HON. W. D. BLOXHAM
COL. FRANK HARRIS
HON. R. W. DAVIS
SEN. H. H. McCREARY
HON. F. P. FLEMING
W. F. STOVALL
C. A. CHOATE, SECRETARY
1909
A. B. CALDWELL
ATLANTA, GA.
COPYRIGHT 1909
B. F. JOHNSON
Photo: http://www.usgwarchives.org/fl/martin/photos/bios/sewall70gbs.jpg
File at: http://files.usgwarchives.org/fl/martin/bios/sewall70gbs.txt
This file has been created by a form at http://www.genrecords.org/flfiles/
File size: 5.9 Kb. Henry Edwin Sewall was born on 22 August 1848 in St. Augustine, Florida.3,4 He was the son of Rev. Rufus King Sewall and Anne Elizabeth Whitehurst.2,1 Henry Edwin Sewall married Abbie Evans Thomas, daughter of Seymour Thomas and Mary Evans, on 23 December 1873.3 Henry Edwin Sewall appear on the census of 1880 at New York (Manhattan), New York, where he is listed as a coal dealer.5 He died on 1 August 1925 in Florida at the age of 76 4 and is buried in All Saints Cemetery, Jensen Beach, Martin County, Florida.6 "In 1889, Henry Edwin Sewall and his wife arrived and gave the Sewall's Point peninsula [Florida] its name. They built their home on the riverbank and in 1891 established a post office with a loading dock at the southern tip of Sewall's Point. The dock became a regular stopping place for Indian River travelers."7
Citations
- [S153] Charles Nelson Sinnett, The Sewall genealogy, p. 49.
- [S5] William Darcy McKeough, McKeough Family Tree.
- [S467] Website USGenWeb (http://www.usgwarchives.org) "http://files.usgwarchives.org/fl/martin/bios/…."
- [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "Find A Grave Memorial# 28795840."
- [S107] 1880 US Census.
- [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "# 28795840."
- [S34] Unverified internet information, http://www.flcities.com/membership/city_trivia_pt.asp
Henry Foster Sewall1
M, b. 31 October 1816, d. 30 April 1896
Henry Foster Sewall|b. 31 Oct 1816\nd. 30 Apr 1896|p440.htm#i953|Henry Devereaux Sewall|b. 21 Aug 1786\nd. 8 Jun 1846|p440.htm#i121|Mary Catherine Norton|b. 6 Jun 1797\nd. 30 Dec 1840|p342.htm#i122|Chief Justice Samuel Sewall LL.D.|b. 11 Dec 1757\nd. 8 Jun 1814|p459.htm#i105|Abigail Devereaux|b. 17 Jun 1766\nd. 22 Feb 1847|p132.htm#i106|Birdsey Norton|d. b 15 Apr 1812|p341.htm#i952||||
Shipping merchant of New York City.2 Henry Foster Sewall was born on 31 October 1816 in Watertown, Jefferson County, New York.3,4 He was the son of Henry Devereaux Sewall and Mary Catherine Norton.1 Henry Foster Sewall married Sarah Allyne Rich on 20 September 1843 in Watertown, New York.3,5 Henry Foster Sewall died on 30 April 1896 in New York, New York, at the age of 79.6,7 The funeral of Henry Foster Sewall took place on 2 May 1896 from his late residence at 955 Madison Avenue, New York.8 Sewall discovered the art of engraving at the age of 40. In 1856 he bought his first prints by Durer, Rembrandt and others. When the collector died, the first curator of the print department in the Boston Museum of Fine Art made frantic efforts to get his institution to buy the collection. He succeeded and today, the 23,000 prints from Sewall's collection form the core of the museum's holdings in the field.9
Children of Henry Foster Sewall and Sarah Allyne Rich
- Henry Devereaux Sewall+3 b. Jul 1844
- Mary N. Sewall3 b. 21 Jul 1844, d. 17 Sep 1845
- Charles Joseph Sewall+3 b. 9 Aug 1849, d. 28 Dec 1898
- Samuel Sewall3 b. 25 Jan 1853, d. 21 Jan 1854
- Dorothea Sewall+3 b. 18 Jan 1855, d. Jun 1891
Citations
- [S5] William Darcy McKeough, McKeough Family Tree.
- [S107] 1880 US Census.
- [S153] Charles Nelson Sinnett, The Sewall genealogy, p.10.
- [S89] LDS Record, IGI Family Group Record.
- [S89] LDS Record, Unverified IGI entry.
- [S251] New York Vital Records.
- [S232] Ancestry.com Database, New York City Deaths, 1892-1902.
- [S160] New York Times, 2 May 1896.
- [S34] Unverified internet information, http://www.ttc.org/cgi-binloc/searchTTC.cgi?displayZop+5649
Henry Foster Sewall1
M, b. 16 December 1876, d. 17 June 1920
Henry Foster Sewall|b. 16 Dec 1876\nd. 17 Jun 1920|p440.htm#i13010|Charles Joseph Sewall|b. 9 Aug 1849\nd. 28 Dec 1898|p427.htm#i13008|Anna Brooks Wellman|b. 28 Dec 1848|p557.htm#i13009|Henry F. Sewall|b. 31 Oct 1816\nd. 30 Apr 1896|p440.htm#i953|Sarah A. Rich|b. c 1818\nd. 12 Aug 1883|p395.htm#i13005|George F. Wellman|b. 13 Apr 1818\nd. 2 Jul 1897|p557.htm#i15158|Caroline M. Prescott|d. 22 May 1881|p375.htm#i15159|
Henry Foster Sewall. Financier.2 He was born on 16 December 1876 in New York, New York.3,4 He was the son of Charles Joseph Sewall and Anna Brooks Wellman.1 Henry Foster Sewall graduated in 1897 from Cornell.2 He married Ethel Redford Mount, daughter of Redford J. Mount and E. Cornelia (Unknown), circa 1906.5,6 Henry Foster Sewall and Ethel Redford Mount appear on the census of 1910 at Manhattan, New York, they were living with her parents. He is an insurance agent.6 Henry Foster Sewall lived at 201 West Eighty-fifth Street, New York.2 He died on 17 June 1920 in Todds Lane, Briarcliff, at his summer home at the age of 43.2 He was President of Sewall & Alden of 80 Maiden Lane. Vice President of A.B. & S. Realty Co; of the Motion Picture News and of the Surbrug Chocolate Corporation.2
Children of Henry Foster Sewall and Ethel Redford Mount
- Barbara Mount Sewall7 b. 10 Jan 1915, d. 12 Sep 1930
- Elinor Sewall5 b. 15 Nov 1916, d. 19 Apr 1997
Citations
- [S153] Charles Nelson Sinnett, The Sewall genealogy, p.10.
- [S160] New York Times, 11 Jun 1920 p. 11.
- [S258] Joshua Wyman Wellman, Thomas Wellman of Lynn, p. 369.
- [S34] Unverified internet information, http://64.233.183.104/search (June 2007).
- [S160] New York Times, 7 Oct 1940 p. 14.
- [S207] 1910 US Census, Manhattan Ward 22, New York, New York.
- [S34] Unverified internet information, http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~houghtonfamily/…
Henry J. Sewall1
M, b. April 1888
Henry J. Sewall|b. Apr 1888|p440.htm#i9013|Henry Devereux Sewall|b. 3 Jul 1849\nd. a 1910|p440.htm#i978|Ella Maria Clark|b. Nov 1860\nd. a 1910|p88.htm#i9009|Rev. Charles C. Sewall|b. 10 May 1802\nd. 22 Nov 1886|p426.htm#i131|Amy Peters|b. 9 Dec 1802\nd. 15 Aug 1872|p362.htm#i132|Charles C. Clark||p87.htm#i12361|Amy P. (Unknown)||p2.htm#i12362|
Henry J. Sewall was born in April 1888 in New York.2 He was the son of Henry Devereux Sewall and Ella Maria Clark.2 Henry J. Sewall is also recorded as Henry D. Sewall.3
Henry Sewall Jr.1
M, b. 4 July 1848
Henry Sewall Jr.|b. 4 Jul 1848|p440.htm#i12876|Henry Sewall|b. 3 Dec 1822\nd. 5 Sep 1887|p439.htm#i12316|Harriet Virginia Smith|b. c 1825|p479.htm#i12875|Charles Sewall|b. 13 Nov 1790\nd. 28 Jan 1872|p426.htm#i10238|Sophia Gill|b. 18 Aug 1797\nd. 5 Feb 1862|p191.htm#i10242|||||||
Henry Sewall Jr.. A book-keeper.2 He was born on 4 July 1848 in Maine.1,2 He was the son of Henry Sewall and Harriet Virginia Smith.1 Henry Sewall Jr. married Eunice Pishon on 18 August 1880.1 On 9 March 1896 it was announced that Harry Sewall had moved to Pittsfield having a position in the office of the Waverly Woolen Company, as cashier and clerk to the treasurer. Mrs Sewall and Master Roy were to remain in Augusta for the time being.3
Child of Henry Sewall Jr. and Eunice Pishon
- Roy Pishon Sewall+1 b. 16 Sep 1884, d. May 1954
Henry L. Sewall
M
Henry L. Sewall||p440.htm#i4443|Nicholas Sewall|d. Nov 1813 or Dec 1813|p454.htm#i4445|Mary Fenwick|d. 1854|p164.htm#i4442|Nicholas L. Sewall|b. c 1720\nd. 1798|p454.htm#i4438|Mary Darnall||p122.htm#i4440|Edward Fenwick|d. 4 Aug 1802|p164.htm#i4645|Ann Hebb||p225.htm#i4646|
Henry Martyn Sewall1
M, b. 11 October 1828, d. 7 October 1833
Henry Martyn Sewall|b. 11 Oct 1828\nd. 7 Oct 1833|p440.htm#i1012|Rufus K. Sewall|b. 10 Dec 1787\nd. 30 Apr 1880|p457.htm#i850|Phoebe Merrill|b. Apr 1793\nd. 14 Jan 1865|p318.htm#i1005|Rev. Samuel Sewall|b. 21 Dec 1765\nd. 16 Mar 1826|p458.htm#i751|Abigail Trask|b. 30 Oct 1762\nd. 14 Nov 1843|p536.htm#i849|Stephen Merrill|b. 1748\nd. 1828|p318.htm#i5752|Phoebe Clifford||p92.htm#i5753|
Henry Martyn Sewall was born on 11 October 1828 in Edgecomb, Maine.2 He was the son of Rufus K. Sewall and Phoebe Merrill.1 Henry Martyn Sewall died on 7 October 1833 at the age of 4.3
Citations
- [S5] William Darcy McKeough, McKeough Family Tree.
- [S34] Unverified internet information, http://www.spoonergen.com/trees/US-William/d0008/…
- [S89] LDS Record, Unverified source.
Henry Middleton Sewall1
M, b. 6 March 1823, d. 3 May 1850
Henry Middleton Sewall|b. 6 Mar 1823\nd. 3 May 1850|p440.htm#i10294|William Sewall|b. 17 Jan 1797\nd. 7 Apr 1846|p462.htm#i5602|Elizabeth Ward Middleton|b. 26 Jul 1795\nd. 5 Oct 1874|p319.htm#i5603|General Henry Sewall|b. 24 Oct 1752\nd. 4 Sep 1845|p440.htm#i85|Tabitha Sewall|b. 25 Nov 1753\nd. 19 Jun 1810|p462.htm#i782|Samuel W. Middleton|b. 4 Sep 1755|p319.htm#i10230|Catherine T. Hooe|d. 1 Nov 1865|p242.htm#i10231|
Henry Middleton Sewall was born on 6 March 1823 in near Granville, Fauquier County, Virginia.2 He was the son of William Sewall and Elizabeth Ward Middleton.1 Henry Middleton Sewall married Anne Elizabeth Higgins on 22 November 1849 in Illinois.1,3 Henry Middleton Sewall died on 3 May 1850 at the age of 27 1 and is was buried in Chandlerville Cemetery, Illinois.2
Child of Henry Middleton Sewall and Anne Elizabeth Higgins
- Henry Middleton Sewall+1 b. 28 Nov 1850, d. 16 Nov 1907
Citations
- [S112] Unknown author, Sewall. 1908.
- [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "# 59113664."
- [S34] Unverified internet information, Illinois Statewide Marriage Index, 1763–1900.
Henry Middleton Sewall1
M, b. 28 November 1850, d. 16 November 1907
Henry Middleton Sewall|b. 28 Nov 1850\nd. 16 Nov 1907|p440.htm#i10296|Henry Middleton Sewall|b. 6 Mar 1823\nd. 3 May 1850|p440.htm#i10294|Anne Elizabeth Higgins|b. Jun 1824\nd. 22 Jul 1907|p228.htm#i10295|William Sewall|b. 17 Jan 1797\nd. 7 Apr 1846|p462.htm#i5602|Elizabeth W. Middleton|b. 26 Jul 1795\nd. 5 Oct 1874|p319.htm#i5603|||||||
Henry Middleton Sewall was born on 28 November 1850 in Cass County, Illinois.1,2 He was the son of Henry Middleton Sewall and Anne Elizabeth Higgins.1 Henry Middleton Sewall married Clara J. Baird on 24 August 1882 and settled on a farm near Urbana, Illinois.1,3 Henry Middleton Sewall married secondly Avilla J. McKinley, daughter of Dr. Charles McKinley, on 22 March 1899 at Champaign County, Illinois.3 Henry Middleton Sewall died on 16 November 1907 at the age of 56.1
Children of Henry Middleton Sewall and Clara J. Baird
- Mae Sewall+1 b. 7 Jul 1883
- Maude Sewall1 b. 23 Mar 1887
- Harry Baird Sewall+1 b. 8 Dec 1889
- Bessie Sewall1 b. 12 Jul 1891
Children of Henry Middleton Sewall and Avilla J. McKinley
- Ruth McKinley Sewall1 b. 2 Aug 1900
- Isabelle Sewall1 b. 20 Sep 1904
Henry Paschal Sewall1,2
M, b. 19 June 1866, d. February 1895
Henry Paschal Sewall|b. 19 Jun 1866\nd. Feb 1895|p440.htm#i12615|Ammi Richamah Sewall|b. 22 Sep 1838\nd. 20 Jan 1913|p423.htm#i12613|Augusta Sprague|b. 27 Apr 1836|p486.htm#i12614|Samuel Sewall|b. 8 Jan 1800\nd. 7 Oct 1880|p458.htm#i12609|Tryphosa Fuller|b. 28 Nov 1806\nd. 2 May 1882|p180.htm#i12610|||||||
Henry Paschal Sewall was born on 19 June 1866 in Brooklyn, New York.1,3 He was the son of Ammi Richamah Sewall and Augusta Sprague.1 Henry Paschal Sewall died in February 1895 at the age of 28.1
Citations
- [S153] Charles Nelson Sinnett, The Sewall genealogy, p. 46.
- [S34] Unverified internet information, http://www.sprague-database.org/genealogy/getperson.php
- [S89] LDS Record, Brooklyn birth certificates, 1866-1909 Brooklyn (New York). Department of Health.
Hepsibah Bailey Sewall1
F, b. 3 October 1801
Hepsibah Bailey Sewall|b. 3 Oct 1801|p440.htm#i1065|Theodore Sewall|b. 11 Nov 1759\nd. 8 Sep 1821|p462.htm#i784|Olive Beal||p31.htm#i888|John Sewall|b. 6 Jul 1716\nd. b 14 Jun 1805|p443.htm#i84|Mary Sayward|b. 23 Apr 1718\nd. 16 Sep 1781|p411.htm#i771|||||||
Hepsibah Bailey Sewall was born on 3 October 1801 in Georgetown.1 She was the daughter of Theodore Sewall and Olive Beal.2 Hepsibah Bailey Sewall married firstly Benjamin Carleton on 2 July 1823 in Alna, Maine.1 The marriage intention of Hepsibah Bailey Sewall and Samuel Stanwood was published on 24 February 1827 in Alna, Maine.1
Herbert H.C. Sewall1
M, b. 1872
Herbert H.C. Sewall|b. 1872|p440.htm#i21850|George Washington Sewall|b. bt 1828 - 1832\nd. 12 Feb 1890|p436.htm#i21848|Lucy E. Briggs|b. c 1841|p51.htm#i16128|||||||||||||
Herbert H.C. Sewall was born in 1872 in Rockland, Maine.1 He was the son of George Washington Sewall and Lucy E. Briggs.1 Herbert H.C. Sewall married Sarah J. Fulcher, daughter of John Fulcher and Josephine H. Doane, on 24 November 1908 in Brockton, Massachusetts.1
Citations
- [S89] LDS Record, Massachusetts Marriages, 1841-1915.
Herbert W. Sewall1
M, b. 26 October 1878, d. 1941
Herbert W. Sewall|b. 26 Oct 1878\nd. 1941|p440.htm#i15683|Nathan Willis Sewall|b. 21 Aug 1854\nd. Jun 1923|p454.htm#i12909|Mary Jessie Goding|b. 29 Jan 1860|p193.htm#i15682|Deacon Calvin D. Sewall|b. 12 Jun 1822\nd. 5 Nov 1883|p425.htm#i12904|Eliza Mayhew|b. 8 Apr 1824\nd. 8 Jan 1873|p312.htm#i12905|Gerry P. Goding|d. 15 Feb 1863|p193.htm#i17250|Mary S. Keep|b. 22 Jun 1839\nd. 1 Feb 1914|p265.htm#i17231|
Herbert W. Sewall was born on 26 October 1878 in Maine.1,2 He was the son of Nathan Willis Sewall and Mary Jessie Goding.1 Herbert W. Sewall married Harriett E Brackett on 21 September 1914 in Wilton, Maine.3 Herbert W. Sewall was employed by G.H. Bass & Co. as a shoe factory foreman in 1918 at Milton, Maine.2 He died in 1941 4 and is buried in Lakeview Cemetery, Wilton, Maine.4
Citations
- [S107] 1880 US Census.
- [S232] Ancestry.com Database, World War I Draft Registration Cards, 1917-1918.
- [S243] Maine State Archives, Maine Marriages 1892-1996.
- [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "# 64635213."
Hiram Stoyle Sewall1
M, b. 25 October 1833
Hiram Stoyle Sewall|b. 25 Oct 1833|p440.htm#i13002|William Dunning Sewall|b. 8 Mar 1804\nd. 18 Aug 1839|p463.htm#i11480|Mary Ann Kellins||p265.htm#i13000|Dummer Sewall|b. 7 Jan 1761\nd. 11 Feb 1846|p430.htm#i741|Jenny Dunning|b. 9 Mar 1763\nd. 26 May 1852|p147.htm#i835|||||||
Hiram Stoyle Sewall was born on 25 October 1833 in Maine.1,2 He was the son of William Dunning Sewall and Mary Ann Kellins.1 Hiram Stoyle Sewall married Eliza M. (Unknown) say 1862.3 Hiram Stoyle Sewall and Eliza M. (Unknown) appear on the census of 1870 at Oregon Township, California, which lists him as a miner.3 Hiram Stoyle Sewall and William Arden Sewall appear on the census of 1880 at Lakeview, Lake, Oregon, listed as traveling with three drovers on a cattle drive. By this stage Hiram Sewall is divorced.2
Children of Hiram Stoyle Sewall and Eliza M. (Unknown)
- Kate ? Sewall3 b. c 1863
- William Arden Sewall3 b. c 1868
Homer Sewall1
M, b. 8 February 1889, d. 3 August 1974
Homer Sewall|b. 8 Feb 1889\nd. 3 Aug 1974|p440.htm#i15976|Benjamin Bowman Sewall|b. 17 Mar 1858\nd. 1906?|p424.htm#i15971|Dulcenia Harris|b. c 1859|p218.htm#i15972|John L. Sewall|b. 29 Oct 1830\nd. 29 Nov 1878|p444.htm#i13099|Louisa J. Bowman|b. 1 Jul 1830|p45.htm#i15536|John N. Harris||p218.htm#i15973|Deucey ?. (Unknown)||p3.htm#i15974|
Homer Sewall. A banker and a broker.2 He was born on 8 February 1889 in Waltham, Massachusetts.1,2 He was the son of Benjamin Bowman Sewall and Dulcenia Harris.1 Homer Sewall married Marjorie Hartwell, daughter of Harry F. Hartwell, on 7 October 1914 in Christ Church, Waltham, Massachusetts, the notice of the wedding indicated that they were going to live at 696 Lexington Street, Waltham.3,2 Homer Sewall died on 3 August 1974 in Waltham, Massachusetts, at the age of 85.4,5
Children of Homer Sewall and Marjorie Hartwell
- Marjorie Sewall+2 b. 20 Jan 1916, d. 27 Mar 2002
- Richard Hartwell Sewall+2 b. 23 Mar 1921, d. 6 Apr 1946
- Homer Sewall2 b. 10 Jul 1924, d. 9 Jun 1944
Homer Sewall1
M, b. 10 July 1924, d. 9 June 1944
Homer Sewall|b. 10 Jul 1924\nd. 9 Jun 1944|p440.htm#i17557|Homer Sewall|b. 8 Feb 1889\nd. 3 Aug 1974|p440.htm#i15976|Marjorie Hartwell|b. 19 Dec 1889\nd. 17 May 1982|p220.htm#i15977|Benjamin B. Sewall|b. 17 Mar 1858\nd. 1906?|p424.htm#i15971|Dulcenia Harris|b. c 1859|p218.htm#i15972|Harry F. Hartwell||p220.htm#i15978||||
Homer Sewall was born on 10 July 1924.1 He was the son of Homer Sewall and Marjorie Hartwell.1 Homer Sewall was killed on 9 June 1944 in Normandy, France, at the age of 19.1 Private 31311877 Homer Sewall Jr. was serving in the U.S. Army, 326th Medical Company, 101st Airborne Division. He is buried in the Normandy American Cemetery, Colleville-sur-Mer, Plot: E Row: 8 Grave: 34. He was awarded the Purple Heart.2
Horace A. Sewall1
M, b. 23 November 1835, d. 3 February 1871
Horace A. Sewall|b. 23 Nov 1835\nd. 3 Feb 1871|p440.htm#i18117|Stinson Sewall|b. c 27 Feb 1789\nd. 14 Jun 1869|p461.htm#i851|Mary Whitmore|b. 21 Mar 1790\nd. 24 Mar 1842|p564.htm#i1015|Rev. Samuel Sewall|b. 21 Dec 1765\nd. 16 Mar 1826|p458.htm#i751|Abigail Trask|b. 30 Oct 1762\nd. 14 Nov 1843|p536.htm#i849|Andrew Whitmore|b. 2 Oct 1760\nd. 31 Mar 1830|p564.htm#i17721|Lucy Couillord||p107.htm#i17722|
Horace A. Sewall. A labourer.1 He was born on 23 November 1835 in Weld, Maine.1 He was the son of Stinson Sewall and Mary Whitmore.1 Horace A. Sewall married (unknown) (Unknown).1 Horace A. Sewall died on 3 February 1871 in Salem, Massachusetts, at the age of 35 of consumption.1
Citations
- [S130] Massachusetts Vital Records, Vol: 238 ; Page: 251.
Horace Porter Sewall1
M, b. June 1827
Horace Porter Sewall|b. Jun 1827|p440.htm#i20661|Samuel Sewall|b. c 1794\nd. 15 Jan 1871|p458.htm#i20421|Betsey Whitney||p564.htm#i20422|Thomas Sewall|b. 18 Sep 1749\nd. Jan 1803|p462.htm#i20347|Sarah Weeks|b. c 1755\nd. a 1850|p556.htm#i20408|||||||
Horace Porter Sewall was born in June 1827 in New Hampshire.2 He was the son of Samuel Sewall and Betsey Whitney.1 Horace Porter Sewall married Sarah F. Jackman circa 1859.1,2
Children of Horace Porter Sewall and Sarah F. Jackman
- Albert P. Sewall+3 b. 25 Jan 1861
- Charles Sewall+3 b. c 1862
- Frank L. Sewall3 b. c 1865
- Leon Sewall3 b. 1869
Howard Sewall1
M, b. 12 November 1860, d. 22 October 1872
Howard Sewall|b. 12 Nov 1860\nd. 22 Oct 1872|p440.htm#i12085|Dr. Francis Lewis Sewall|b. 13 Nov 1812\nd. 1875|p435.htm#i12075|Ann Amelia DuBose|b. 31 Mar 1839\nd. 9 Nov 1871|p141.htm#i12083|Lewis Sewall|b. 2 Feb 1760\nd. a 1832|p447.htm#i12068|Elizabeth H. Wailes|b. 21 Mar 1781\nd. 15 Oct 1825|p546.htm#i12069|||||||
Howard Sewall was born on 12 November 1860 in Clarke County, Alabama.2,1 He was the son of Dr. Francis Lewis Sewall and Ann Amelia DuBose.1 Howard Sewall died on 22 October 1872 at the age of 11.1
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