Home
| Query
| Town Index
| Records
| Volunteers
| Links
CT GenWeb | CT
Archives | US GenWeb
Windham County Connecticut
CTGenweb Project
WINDHAM COUNTY RECORDS |
HENRY PALMER RIX BIOGRAPHY AS RECORDED IN: COMMEMORATIVE BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD OF
TOLLAND AND WINDHAM COUNTIES BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES OF PROMINENT
AND REPRESENTATIVE CITIZENS AND OF MANY PUBLISHER: J.H.BEERS & CO., CHICAGO; 1903 P. 702
HENRY PALMER RIX, born Jan. 22, 1836, in Preston, New London Co., Conn., is one of the older and much esteemed citizens of Tolland and enjoys the respect his long and useful life so well merits. Aaron Prentice Rix, father of Henry
P., was born March 11, 1802, in Griswold, Conn., and died April 7,
1875, in Norwich. On Nov. 16, 1824, he married Mary Stanton, who
was born Nov. 7, 1804, daughter of Joseph Stanton. Her death occurred
Jan. 14, 1846, in North Stonington, Conn., and Mr. Rix subsequently
married Mary Adams, of North Stonington. They had no children. To
the first union came: Mary A., born Aug. 16, 1827, who died Jan.
14, 1846; James P., born June 29, 1829, who died in Rockville, where
he had James Rix, the grandfather of Henry Palmer, was born in Griswold, Conn., in what was known as Rixtown, and was a very successful farmer. By an accident he broke his leg, and could not walk for many years before his death, which occurred when he was eighty-seven years old. Mary Preston, his wife, was born in Bean Hill, in the town of Norwich, Conn., and was the mother of the following family: James, Aaron P., Joel, Asa, Daniel, Hannah, and Sybil. James Rix, the great-grandfather of Henry Palmer, is supposed to have been born in Griswold. Two brothers of the name, according to the family traditions, came from Scotland at an early day, one settling in Griswold, Conn., and the other in Massachusetts, and from the first this family in Tolland is descended, though the ancestral line is not very definite. Henry Palmer Rix was born in Preston,
and at the age of three months, was taken by his parents to North
Stonington, where the ensuing twelve years of his life were passed.
When he was twelve the family moved to Norwich, where they spent
two years, and then located in Mansfield, where his school days ended
under the instruction of John M. Turner. When he was eighteen he
left school, and spent two years at farming, when he entered the
Rock mill at Rockville, to learn the trade of wool sorter under Hiram
Fiske. Mr. Rix Mr. Rix bought the Daniel Chapman farm of a hundred acres in Tolland in 1868, and six years later built the pleasant home where he now resides. It stands on the site of the Chapman Hotel, an important center of travel during the Revolution, and which was built in 1757 on the Rockville and Tolland Road. In connection with his farming operations, Mr. Rix ran a dairy for twenty-four years, but is now selling the milk to the Vernon creamery, of which he was one of the original stockholders and incorporators. Mr. and Mrs. Rix are both members of Tolland Grange, and attend the Union Congregational Church, of Rockville, of which Mrs. Rix is a member. Mrs. Rix is also a member of the Woman' Relief Corps of Rockville. Mr. Rix is a staunch Republican, has served on the board of selectmen for three years, and was assessor for a year. He has served as grand juror, and in 1884 came within one vote of being elected Representative to the General Assembly, although the town is strongly Democratic. Mr. Rix was married March 28, 1860,
to Miss Lizzie Hale, who was born July 13, 1841, the daughter of
Orrin Hale and his wife Sophia Fox, of Glastonbury, and to them were
born the following children: George Henry, born Feb. 12, 1861, who
married Sadie Beckwith, and is a farmer and dairyman at Beaumont,
Texas; Charles Prentice, born Aug. 12, 1863, who married Annie Rogers,
of Rockville, and is a salesman for a large coal firm in Newark,
N.J.; Frederick Stanton, born Aug. 11, 1865, who died Oct. 26, 1868;
Burt Mr. Rix is essentially a self-made man, and by hard work and unwearied industry has accumulated a very comfortable competence, and won for himself a most enviable standing in the world. He is one of the most successful and prosperous farmers in Tolland, and as a man and a neighbor is greatly liked by the people of his own community.
Reproduced by: Linda D. Pingel great-great granddaughter of Cyrus White of Rockville, Ct. |
Copyright © 2008-20152008
Please send comments to
CT-Genealogy@cox.net
Home
| Query
| Town Index
| Records
| Volunteers
| Links
CT GenWeb | CT
Archives | US GenWeb