Showing posts with label GARRETT. Show all posts
Showing posts with label GARRETT. Show all posts

Sunday, December 14, 2014

EMLEN #SurnameSunday

EMLEN FAMILY
One of a Series of Sketches Written by Frank Willing Leach for the Philadelphia North American, 1907-1913, and Brought Down to Date, 1932
EMLEN
Among the old Quaker families which, at the earliest period of its history gave to Philadelphia its distinctive title of the "Quaker City," was that of the Emlens; a name which, for over two centuries, has been a synonym for probity, integrity and approved citizenship–always exemplifying its family motto: "Honestum praetulit utili."
It is a tradition in the family that the Emlens came originally from Wales, though the emigrant ancestor was of English birth. These facts are cited in proof of the conjecture: Emlyn Cantred was one of the divisions of southern Wales, "in the tymes of the Brittaines." Here stood Castle (afterward New Castle) Emlyn on the river Teivi. We are told that "the name (which was common among the Britains anciently and is partly yet retained) was Roman and is the same with Aemillinus, mentioned in Denbighshire, which the Inscription calls Almilini."
This inscription, "Almilini Tovisaci," on a sepulchral stone, has much discussed, and one of the most eminent Welsh scholars and archeologists "considered this stone to be the memorial of a Welsh prince or Leader Emlyn"; moreover, that it dates from the fifth or sixth century: "Tovisaci" meaning "leader" or "general."
In certain Welsh manuscripts appear "Dafydd Emlyn," "Siams Emlyn," etc., 1635. The name also appears in different parts of England in the same century.
From "Some accounts of the Life and Death of George Emlen, as given in writing by his sons Joshua and Samuel Emlen, late of this City, Philadelphia," the following information is gleaned, concerning the founder of the name in America:
He was born in a Town called Shepton Mallet in Summersetshire [Somerset], was apprenticed a vintner in London, and his parents having died when he was young, he was put under the care and tuition of an Aunt, who was Presbyterian–he was one of that people till he arrived at mature age, when embracing the Principles of Truth, as we believe, or turning a Friend, he was deprived of his Aunt's favor, or any expectations from her, who was a Person of considerable substance in the World, when meeting her displeasure, he was necessitated to provide for himself.
The account written by the sons then sets forth that "he came over sea with William Penn"; which expression is a general one, and does not signify that he accompanied Penn on the Welcome, but that he came over in Penn's time, and was among the early settlers in Philadelphia.
The first positive record we have of him as a citizen of Philadelphia is upon the occasion of his first marriage, hereafter referred to, which took place November 12, 1685, which was about three years after Penn's first arrival in the province. We also find him in the first tax list for Philadelphia county, that for 1693, where he is indicated as assessed at the following amount: "150 pounds", which was above the average assessment of his contemporaries.
As we have already seen, his business was that of a "vintner," "in which condition of Life," we are told by his sons, "he conducted with honour and good repute to the cause of Truth and to himself." Upon the occasion of his first marriage, in 1685, he was called "husbandman"–both terms signifying that he was engaged in agricultural pursuits, though the first-mentioned title, "vintner," indicated that he was more particularly engaged in the conduct of a vineyard, and the incidental manufacture of wine.
George Emlen married, November 12, 1685, Eleanor Allen, daughter of Nathaniel Allen, a man of very considerable note, who was named by William Penn, September 30, 1681, as one of the three commissioners authorized to embark for Pennsylvania and lay out the city of Philadelphia.
Three children were born to this first wife, all of whom died young; and the death of the mother occurred shortly after the birth of the third child.
George Emlen married, secondly, June 5, 1694, Hannah Garrett, daughter of William and Ann (Kirk) Garrett, who came to Pennsylvania from Leicestershire, England, in 1684, and settled in Darby, but subsequently moved to Philadelphia. Of her we have a pleasing pen-picture in the words of her devoted sons, who wrote that she "brought up her children with the utmost care and industry–and was a noble example to them of all that was good and laudable–very constant in advice to them to love and fear the Lord." They also tell us:
She was a dutiful child to her Parents & excellent wife to her husband, a loving mother to her children, an entire friend to the Poor & Distressed–undaunted in Danger–Religious and Ingenious–an easy mistress & good neighbor, neither lavish nor penurious–but an example of Industry as well to her own children as servants. Her precepts to virtue were pressing and earnest–her advice was to live in the fear of the Lord & to follow peace with all men, to keep to Truth and Plainness–to frequent religious meetings with great Industry–to act or do nothing but what became the followers of the meek & humble Jesus.
She was well beloved by most that knew her & hath left a good name and dyed in Peace. .. .. .. She as a darling favorite of both her Parents, as well she might be. .. .. .. happy are the children who follow the advice and example of such a Parent.
George and Hannah (nee Garrett) Emlen had eight children, as follows: George, Samuel, Caleb, Joshua, Hannah, Anne, Mary and Sarah. Of these, two died unmarried–Caleb, born June 9, 1699, and Hannah, born February 3, 1703-04.

Friday, December 12, 2014

THOMAS GARRETT, Station Master #FamilyHistoryFriday



Parents: Thomas and Sarah (Price) Garrett.
Thomas and Margaret (Sharpless) Garrett were married in 1813 and to this union 5 children were born. Margaret died in 1828. In 1830 Thomas married Rachel Mendenhall, and they had 1 child (Eli). Thomas and Rachel were married 38 years.
Thomas and Rachel (Mendenhall) Garrett were very active in the Underground Railroad movement from their home in Wilmington, Deleware, and he was originally a member of the Darby Monthly Meeting of the Religious Society of Friends; in 1822, he moved to Wilmington, Delaware and transferred his membership to the Wilmington Monthly Meeting. . As a young boy growing up, Thomas had experienced his parents hiding many runaway slaves in their home, helping them escape the bonds of slavery. As a young man, Thomas himself rescued a young black woman employeed by his family from those who kidnapped her with intentions of selling her into slavery. This made a lasting impression, so that Thomas and Rachel continued this effort, sending many who sought freedom from slavery, to Isaac and Dinah Mendenhall's home on the route northward. Isaac was a brother to Rachel, and lived just over the line in Pennsylvania, about 20 miles away from the Garrett home.
Stations usually were at least 20 miles apart. Conductors used covered wagons or carts with false bottoms to carry the slaves from one station to the next. Runaway slaves hid during the day and traveled at night. Some of the people who were involved, notified runaways of their stations by lighting candles and putting them in the windows.
Thomas was known as a Social Reformer who served as one of the "Station Masters" on the Underground Railroad during the mid-1800's. He is credited with helping more than 2,700 slaves escape to freedom in a forty year career as a Station Master. Along with Harriet Tubman, he was responsible for the escape of hundreds of slaves to freedom. He used his wife’s family fortune (she was from a banking family) to fund the freedom of more than fourteen hundred fugitives, whom he typically delivered into the hands of the Philadelphia Vigilance Committee. Garrett was a persistent, reliable resource for the Underground Railroad -- Harriet Tubman herself frequently appeared at his door for assistance. While maintaining an inconsistently successful hardware business, Garrett acted as a key Station Master on the eastern line of the Underground Railroad, and his activities brought him in contact with Philadelphia Station Master William Still. The correspondence between the two men, preserved and published by Still, provides scholars with an intimate perspective of their struggle and those of countless Agents and Conductors on the Eastern Line of the Underground Railroad.
In 1848, Thomas Garrett and fellow abolitionist John Hunn were tried and convicted in the New Castle Delaware Courthouse by U.S. Supreme Court Chief Justice Roger B. Taney, for aiding in the escape of the Hawkins family, who had been slaves in Maryland. Both men were given large fines, with Thomas' totalling $5,400, a major amount of money in the mid-1800's. In his closing address, Thomas Garrett regaled those in the courtroom with a redoubled commitment to help runaway slaves. Eyewitness accounts detail the particular contrition of a slave-holding juror from southern Delaware who rose to shake Garrett's hand and apologize at the close of the impassioned speech. He said to Judge Taney: "Thou has left me without a dollar,....I say to thee and to all in this court room, that if anyone knows a fugitive who wants shelter....send him to Thomas Garrett and he will befriend him." Following the Civil War, he continued his work for minority groups in America. In 1870, when black Americans were given the right to vote by the establishment of the 15th Amendment, Garrett was carried on the shoulders of his supporters through the streets of Wilmington as they hailed him "Our Moses"- (biography by: Russ Pickett).
Thomas Garrett wrote a letter to Sarah Bradford about the activities of Harriet Tubman on the Underground Railroad (June, 1866) http://www.fold3.com/page/1342_underground_railroad/
When Garrett died less than a year later, his funeral, attended by many of the black residents of the city, featured a procession of Garrett's coffin - borne from shoulder to shoulder up Quaker Hill.
Thomas Garrett even was the inspiration for the character Simeon Halliday in Harriet Beecher Stowe's influential novel "Uncle Tom's Cabin" and has been called Delaware's greatest humanitarian.
(Sources: 
The Thomas Garrett Trial -http://www.fold3.com/page/1342_underground_railroad/         
http://www.geni.com/people/Thomas-Garrett/6000000019290653843       
http://articles.philly.com/1991-10-20/news/25814041_1_quaker-underground-railroad-marker      

Thomas Garrett is my third cousin 8 times removed.
You 
   →  Pop 
your father →  Rufus S. Nichols 
his father →  James "Jim" Ira Nichols 
his father →  Harriet Isabelle Maywood Nichols 
his mother → Clarissa "Betty" (Richards) Williams 
her mother →  Nancy (Moore) Richards 
her mother →  Jacob Moore 
her father →  Isaac Moore 
his father →  Sarah Moore 
his mother → Samuel Emlen 
her father →  Hannah Emlen 
his mother →  Samuel Garrett, II 
her brother →  Nathan Garrett 
his son →  Thomas Garrett 
his son →  Thomas Garrett 
his son

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MY ETHNICITY ESTIMATES

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Europe100%

  • Europe West42%
  • Great Britain19%
  • Scandinavia17%
  • Ireland11%
  • Iberian Peninsula9%
  • Trace Regions
    2%
  • Italy/Greece2%

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