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Windham County Connecticut
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WINDHAM COUNTY RECORDS |
WILLIAM BENTON MARTIN BIOGRAPHY AS RECORDED IN: COMMEMORATIVE BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD OF TOLLAND AND WINDHAM COUNTIES CONNECTICUT. BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES OF PROMINENT AND REPRESENTATIVE CITIZENS AND OF MANY OF THE EARLY SETTLED FAMILIES. PUBLISHER: J.H.BEERS & CO., CHICAGO; 1903 P. 724 WILLIAM BENTON MARTIN. The Martin family is an old and prominent one in New England, and being allied by marriage with other honorable families, many of its descendants, direct and indirect, have been distinguished persons through many States of the Union, one of the number being no less a personage than Martin Van Buren, who became President of the United States. From the early records of the Martin family we find that they settled in Massachusetts, but later removed to Connecticut. Another branch were the earliest settlers in Great Barrington, Mass. The Connecticut Martins located near Hampton, in which vicinity this branch of the family lived until 1815, when Elisha Martin, grandfather of William B., moved to the town of Tolland. His great-grandfather, Ebenezer
Martin, born in 1696, died July 13, 1775. On Oct. 4, 1721, he married
(first) Mary Millband, by whom he had two children: John, born
May 24, 1725; and Mary, born July 11, 1726. After the mothers
death the father married, on April 1, 1729, Jerusha Durkee. The
children of this union were: Joseph, born March 29, 1730, is mentioned
below. Ebenezer, born March 31, 1732, was a clergyman. Jerusha,
born Jan. 9, 1734, married Joseph Utley. William, born March 11,
1736, married Naomi Upham, and died April 19, 1811. Elizabeth,
born Aug. 1, 1738, married Ebenezer Griffin. Amasa was born Oct.
7, 1740. George, born March 14, 1742, married Dorothy Brown, and
died July 6, 1806; he was a cooper, and removed to Vermont. Benjamin,
born July 28, 1745, married Lucy Clark; The Durkee family, to which Mrs. Jerusha
(Durkee) Martin belonged, were among the first settlers of Windham
(now Hampton), Conn., locating there in 1708-09. The branch under
consideration are descended from William, John and Jemima Durkee,
who were among the seventeen corporators of the Church in that town
June 5, 1723. William Durkee and his wife, Rebecca (Gould), came
from Ipswich, Mass., where they were married Jan. 13, 1704. Their
family comprised ten children: Martha, Jerusha (wife of Ebenezer
Martin), William, Joseph Martin, born March 29, 1730, died July 18, 1808. On Oct. 17, 1751, he married Elizabeth Ford, and they had the following children: Joseph, born July 24, 1752, died Dec. 22, 1752; Joseph (2) is mentioned below; Eunice, born Dec. 26, 1756, married Ebenezer Clark, and died May 20, 1833; Nathaniel F., born Oct. 27, 1759, married Jerusha Lincoln; Elizabeth, born Dec. 25, 1761, married Daniel Flint; Amasa, born July 31, 1764, married Ursula Utley; Joshua married Betsey Loomis; and Ebenezer married Susan Scott. The second marriage of Joseph Martin was to Zerviah Daily, a widow, who bore him four children: John, who married Sally Davis; Sybil, married to Elijah Randall; Cynthia; and Orson. Joseph Martin (2), born May 6,
1754, in 1775 married Abigail Butler, who was born Nov. 12, 1755.
Their family of eight children were as follows: Elisha is mentioned
below. Elizabeth, born March 28, 1779, lived a life filled with
good deeds and died in Chaplin, unmarried. Daniel, born April 20,
1781, married Elizabeth Adams, and lived and died in Chaplin, where
his sons were shoe manufacturers for a time, later moving to Massachusetts,
on Mill river. Asaph, born April 10, 1783, was a farmer, and died
in Chaplin, unmarried, his sister Betsey
keeping house for him. Thomas, born July 15, 1785, married Hannah Moulton;
he lived and died in Chaplin, where he at one time ran a mill, though
his principal work was farming; he held many offices and served in the
Legislature several times; his son became a Superior Court Elisha Martin was born Sept. 17, 1776,
and in 1806 married, in Chaplin, Almira Robbins, a native of Hampton,
born in September, 1786, a daughter of John Robbins, who came to
Tolland in his later years. His first wife was Elizabeth Hutchinson,
his second Alice Williams. The Hutchinson family came from Scotland
and settled in the Wyoming Valley, in Pennsylvania. At the time of
the famous Indian massacre, the mother of Elizabeth Hutchinson fled
with her children at the approach of the savages. One brother was
lame, and an older brother undertook to carry him, but the load was
too heavy, and the unfortunate child, being left behind, was tomahawked.
The others escaped by crossing the Susquehanna river. This family
never returned to the desolated Wyoming Valley, but came East and
endeavored to forget the fertile farms After marriage Elisha Martin
lived in Chaplin until 1815, when he came to Tolland and settled
on a farm, a mile west of the street, bought from Squire Fuller.
Subsequently he removed to the western part of the town, where he
died July, 1860, his wife surviving until Nov. 20, 1882, and reaching
the age of ninety-six. She was a very well-preserved old lady, and
well known in the community. Elisha Martin was a man of fine presence,
one of the sturdy type of farmers who so well represent the best
class of an agricultural section. He was originally a Whig in politics,
and later a staunch supporter of the Republican principles, and he
was long a member of the Congregational Church. The family reared
by this worthy man was as follows: Elisha H. is mentioned below.
Betsey Almira, born Dec. 31, 1808, married Charles Chapman, of Tolland,
and died in Rockville, May 16, 1889. Lucien W., born April 13, 1811,
married Mary E. Champlin, of Lebanon, daughter of John Champlin (whose
wife was a sister of Dr. Charles Sweet, the noted bone-setter, of
Lebanon), and died in 1901, in Tolland. John Harman, Elisha Hutchinson Martin, father of our subject, was born March 11, 1807, in Chaplin, Conn., and came thence to Tolland when but a boy of eight years, his parents locating on a farm west of Tolland street; later the family removed to a place near the sand hill, in the vicinity of Rockville, and there Elisha H. Martin grew to maturity. On Jan. 15, 1832, in Tolland, he was married to Lydia Minerva Ladd, of Tolland, who was born March 14, 1809, near the head of Snipsic, in the northwestern part of the town of Tolland, a daughter of Jonathan Ladd. The Ladd family is one of oldest in Tolland. Jonathan Ladd, the first one to locate there, came from Norwich to Tolland, and on April 6, 1720, he was admitted as an inhabitant. He settled on what is known as Grants Hill, and later removed to the northwestern part of the town, where he continued to live ever afterward. On Dec. 23, 1713, in Norwich, he married Susannah Kingsbury, and they reared a family of ten children five sons and five daughters. The third child and second son, Jonathan, was born in 1718, and married Anna Tyler, who died Aug. 19, 1803, aged seventy-seven years. She was a daughter of John Tyler, who came from Boxford, Mass., to Tolland, and on Jan. 27, 1719, was admitted as a citizen there; he settled near the Willimantic river in Tolland. Jonathan Ladd died Aug. 27, 1810, in his ninety-third year. His family numbered eight children, five sons and three daughters, and the second child and youngest son, Jonathan, born in 1764, was the grandfather of Lydia Minerva Ladd. To Elisha H. and Lydia M. (Ladd) Martin
came children as follows: Amanda Almira, born July 30, 1834, died
Oct. 25, 1875, in East Long Meadow, Mass., unmarried. Sarah Ladd,
born Dec. 7, 1839, died Aug. 18, 1841. Maria Celia, born April 20,
1843, was married Dec. 19, 1870, to Henry A. Eaton, now deceased,
and she makes her home in Rockville. Elisha Johnson, mentioned elsewhere,
was born Oct. 12, 1845. Sarah Jane, born Aug. 7, 1847, was married
Aug. 24, 1872, to Rufus A. Russell, of Springfield, where she lives.
William Benton, born Aug. 25, 1853, is mentioned below. Elisha H.
Martin went to housekeeping on what was later known as the Lovett
farm, in Tolland, owning it at one time, and later selling it to
his father. He then built a home on the shore of Snipsic lake in
Tolland, where he lived until 1870, with the exception of three years
from 1858 to 1861, when he did teaming (oxen being used almost exclusively
for such labor) in Rockville, and made William Benton Martin was born
Aug. 25, 1853. He commenced attending school at the White school
house
in Tolland, his first teacher being Miss Abi Brown. During the three
years the family resided in Rockville, he went to school in that place
and also after their return to Tolland. In the fall of 1870 he entered
the New Britain Normal school, but his fathers death in that year
caused his withdrawal, as family duties pressed upon him. During that
winter he worked as a farm hand, and in the spring of 1871 having decided
to learn the carpenters trade, came to Rockville. After a short
term, however, he gave it up, and engaged with R.S. Lewis in the business
of laying concrete sidewalks, later doing the same work in Manchester,
Conn., and Syracuse, N.Y. In the fall of 1871 he returned to Rockville,
and again In the spring of 1876 Mr. Martin left
Long Meadow, as business in the stone quarry for which he had hauled
stone was very dull, and he found employment in teaming on the railroad
then building between Melrose and Rockville. In the fall of 1876
he began a general teaming business in Rockville, which was the beginning
of his successful career there. Buying a tract of timber in Tolland,
he hauled wood from it when other business was dull, and sawed it
by hand with a buck-saw. Some years later from this beginning was
developed a large business, and our subject bought out Harvey King.
At this time his equipment for sawing was horse power; later steam
was introduced and in 1883 Mr. Martin added coal to his other lines,
at first delivering direct from the cars, and later hiring the Ryan
coal yard on Spring street. In 1888, in order to combine his business,
which was increasing, he bought the lot on Vernon avenue, where his
present establishment is located. It was pasture Mr. Martin was married April
12, 1882, in Tolland, to Miss Emma N. Willis, a native of Tolland,
daughter of Jesse and Nancy (Martin) Willis; she died July 22,
1883, and was buried in Grove Hill cemetery. On Sept. 30, 1885,
Mr. Martin married, in Rockville, Miss Theodora Wilcox, a native
of Coventry, Conn., born July 10, 1866, daughter of Calvin G. and
Phoebe (Brown) Wilcox. The parents of Mrs. Martin came from Rhode
Island, and are now residents of Merrow, Conn. Before marriage,
Mrs. Martin taught school in Andover and Tolland, Conn., a term
at each place. Her family is an old one, and by marriage is connected
with many other prominent families of New England. Phoebe Brown,
her mother, was a school teacher of considerable experience, and
taught in Rhode Island. Mrs. Martin is a lady of prominence in
Rockville, and is eligible to membership in the D.A.R. She is very
active in the work of the Union Congregational Church and its Ladies Aid Reproduced by: Linda D. Pingel great-great granddaughter of Cyrus White of Rockville, Ct. |
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