PoliticalGraveyard.com
The Political Graveyard: A Database of American History
Condit family of Orange, New Jersey

Note: This is just one of 1,164 family groupings listed on The Political Graveyard web site. These families each have three or more politician members, all linked together by blood, marriage or adoption.

This specific family group is a subset of the much larger Four Thousand Related Politicians group. An individual may be listed with more than one subset.

These groupings — even the names of the groupings, and the areas of main activity — are the result of a computer algorithm working with the data I have, not the choices of any historian or genealogist.

  Robert Treat (1625-1710) — of Milford, New Haven County, Conn.; Newark, Essex County, N.J. Born in Pitminster, Somerset, England, 1625. Colonial Governor of Connecticut, 1683-98. Founder of Milford, Connecticut and Newark, New Jersey. Died in Milford, New Haven County, Conn., July 12, 1710 (age about 85 years). Interment at Milford Cemetery, Milford, Conn.
  Relatives: Great-grandfather of Robert Treat Paine; third great-grandfather of John Condit and Aurelius Buckingham; third great-granduncle of Gershom Birdsey and Benjamin Hard; fourth great-grandfather of Silas Condit, Philo Beecher Buckingham, Alanson B. Treat, Charles M. Hotchkiss and David Leroy Treat; fourth great-granduncle of Henry Leavitt Ellsworth, William Wolcott Ellsworth, Eli Coe Birdsey (1799-1843), Lorenzo Burrows, Nathan Belcher, Russell Sage, John Ransom Buck and Benjamin Baker Merrill; fifth great-grandfather of Albert Pierson Condit and Robert Treat Paine Jr.; fifth great-granduncle of Henry Brewster Stanton, Bushrod Ebenezer Hoppin, Eli Coe Birdsey (1843-1929), Edgar Jared Doolittle, Delos Fall, Caleb Seymour Pitkin, Clayton Harvey Deming, Harry Kear Wolcott, Franklin Warren Kellogg and Henry Merrill Wolcott; sixth great-grandfather of Simeon Harrison Rollinson and Joseph Clark Baldwin III; sixth great-granduncle of Roscoe D. Dix, John Alden Dix and Oliver Cromwell Jennings; seventh great-grandfather of Perry Amherst Carpenter; seventh great-granduncle of George Anthony Sweetland.
  Political family: Kellogg-Adams-Seymour-Chapin family of Connecticut and New York (subset of the Four Thousand Related Politicians).
Abraham Davenport Abraham Davenport (1715-1789) — of Stamford, Fairfield County, Conn. Born in Stamford, Fairfield County, Conn., June 6, 1715. Lawyer; member of Connecticut council of assistants, 1776-83. Famed for his decisive response during the "Dark Day," May 19, 1780, when all-day darkness in New England led many to think that the end of the world was at hand. In the state council meeting in Hartford, he said, "I am against adjournment. The day of judgment is either approaching, or it is not. If it is not, there is no cause for an adjournment; if it is, I choose to be found doing my duty. I wish therefore that candles may be brought." John Greenleaf Whittier wrote a poem about this incident in 1866; John F. Kennedy referenced Davenport's actions in speeches during the 1960 presidential campaign. Died in Danbury, Fairfield County, Conn., November 20, 1789 (age 74 years, 167 days). Interment at Northfield Cemetery, Stamford, Conn.
  Relatives: Son of John Davenport (1669-1731) and Elizabeth (Morris) Davenport; married, November 16, 1750, to Elizabeth Huntington; married, August 8, 1776, to Martha (Coggeshall) Fitch; father of John Davenport (1752-1830) and James Davenport; grandfather of Theodore Davenport; granduncle of Abraham Davenport (1767-1837); great-granduncle of Thaddeus Betts; second great-granduncle of Joseph Pomeroy Root; fourth great-granduncle of Alfred Collins Lockwood; second cousin once removed of Aaron Kitchell; second cousin thrice removed of Edward Green Bradford; second cousin four times removed of Elias Mulford Condit and Edward Green Bradford II; second cousin five times removed of Isaac Edwin Mansfield, Frank L. Stiles, John Henry Blakeslee, George Newbury Blakeslee, Edward Green Bradford Jr. and Elizabeth Bradford du Pont Bayard.
  Political families: DuPont family of Wilmington, Delaware; Livingston-Schuyler family of New York; Kellogg-Adams-Seymour-Chapin family of Connecticut and New York (subsets of the Four Thousand Related Politicians).
  See also Wikipedia article — Find-A-Grave memorial
  Image source: Stamford Historical Society
  Robert Treat Paine (1731-1814) — of Taunton, Bristol County, Mass. Born in Boston, Suffolk County, Mass., March 11, 1731. Lawyer; Delegate to Continental Congress from Massachusetts, 1774-78; signer, Declaration of Independence, 1776; member of Massachusetts state house of representatives, 1777; Massachusetts state attorney general, 1777-90; justice of Massachusetts state supreme court, 1790-1804. Congregationalist. Member, Freemasons. Died in Boston, Suffolk County, Mass., May 12, 1814 (age 83 years, 62 days). Interment at Old Granary Burying Ground, Boston, Mass.; statue at Church Green, Taunton, Mass.; memorial monument at Constitution Gardens, Washington, D.C.
  Relatives: Son of Thomas Paine and Eunice (Treat) Paine; married to Sarah Cobb; great-grandson of Robert Treat; second great-grandfather of Robert Treat Paine Jr.; second cousin twice removed of John Condit, Eli Thacher Hoyt, Aurelius Buckingham and Chauncey Fitch Cleveland; second cousin thrice removed of Silas Condit, Ira Chandler Backus, Joshua Perkins, Edward Green Bradford, Philo Beecher Buckingham, Bailey Frye Adams, Henry Sabin, Lee Randall Sanborn, Alanson B. Treat, Charles M. Hotchkiss and David Leroy Treat; second cousin four times removed of Albert Pierson Condit, Edward Green Bradford II, James L. Sanborn and Warren Walter Rich; second cousin five times removed of Clarence Sidney Merrill, Simeon Harrison Rollinson, Edward Green Bradford Jr., Elizabeth Bradford du Pont Bayard and Joseph Clark Baldwin III; third cousin twice removed of Gershom Birdsey, Benjamin Hard and Alonzo Sidney Upham; third cousin thrice removed of Henry Leavitt Ellsworth, William Wolcott Ellsworth, Eli Coe Birdsey, Lorenzo Burrows, Nathan Belcher, Russell Sage, Gilbert Carlton Walker, John Ransom Buck and Benjamin Baker Merrill; fourth cousin of Luther Waterman; fourth cousin once removed of David Waterman and Jonathan Brace.
  Political families: DuPont family of Wilmington, Delaware; Livingston-Schuyler family of New York; Kellogg-Adams-Seymour-Chapin family of Connecticut and New York (subsets of the Four Thousand Related Politicians).
  See also congressional biography — Govtrack.us page — Wikipedia article — Find-A-Grave memorial
  Silas Condict (1738-1801) — of Morris County, N.J. Born in Morristown, Morris County, N.J., March 7, 1738. Delegate to Continental Congress from New Jersey, 1781; member of New Jersey state house of assembly from Morris County, 1791-94, 1796-98, 1800. Died in Morristown, Morris County, N.J., September 6, 1801 (age 63 years, 183 days). Interment at First Presbyterian Church Cemetery, Morristown, N.J.
  Relatives: Son of Peter Condict and Phebe (Dodd) Condict; married, April 10, 1760, to Phebe Day; married, March 16, 1763, to Abigail Byram; uncle of Lewis Condict; great-grandfather of Augustus William Cutler; first cousin once removed of John Condit; first cousin twice removed of Silas Condit, Israel Dodd Condit and Alfred Henry Condict; first cousin thrice removed of Albert Pierson Condit, Amzi Condit, Elias Mulford Condit and Fillmore Condit; second cousin twice removed of Simeon Harrison; second cousin four times removed of Simeon Harrison Rollinson; fourth cousin of Philip Frisbee; fourth cousin once removed of Calvin Frisbie, Francis William Kellogg, Frederick Walker Pitkin and George Eastman.
  Political families: Condit family of Orange, New Jersey; Kellogg-Adams-Seymour-Chapin family of Connecticut and New York (subsets of the Four Thousand Related Politicians).
  See also congressional biography — Govtrack.us page — Find-A-Grave memorial
  Philip Frisbee (1740-1813) — of Albany County, N.Y.; Columbia County, N.Y. Born in Branford, New Haven County, Conn., 1740. Served in the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War; member of New York state assembly, 1781-82, 1792-93 (Albany County 1781-82, Columbia County 1792-93). Died in Canaan, Columbia County, N.Y., March 12, 1813 (age about 72 years). Interment at Canaan Cemetery, Canaan, N.Y.
  Relatives: Son of Desire (Grannis) Frisbee and Gideon Frisbie; married 1757 to Phoebe Hendricks; married, December 9, 1779, to Sarah (Beebe) Waterman; great-grandfather of Alonzo Thompson Frisbee; third great-grandfather of Jay Dickson Frisbee; first cousin five times removed of George Franklin Chapin; second cousin once removed of Calvin Frisbie; second cousin twice removed of Erwin J. Baldwin and Francis Everett Baldwin; second cousin thrice removed of Frank L. Stiles, Ernest Ransom Brockett, John Henry Blakeslee and George Newbury Blakeslee; second cousin four times removed of Waldo Stiles Blakeslee; third cousin of James Doolittle Wooster; third cousin once removed of Thaddeus Betts; third cousin twice removed of Gideon Hotchkiss, Asahel Augustus Hotchkiss, Harrison Blodget, Henry Clinton Frisbee, Julius Hotchkiss, James Rood Doolittle, Giles Waldo Hotchkiss, Joshua Perkins, William Judson Clark, Benjamin Doolittle, Charles Hull Clark, Rush Green Leaming, Robert Cleveland Usher, Edgar Jared Doolittle and Charles Brown Frisbie; third cousin thrice removed of Lucian Dallas Woodruff, Hobart L. Hotchkiss, Walter Harrison Blodget, Charles M. Hotchkiss, Ernest Harvey Woodford, Harley D. Hotchkiss and Ezra H. Frisby; fourth cousin of Silas Condict and Ira Yale; fourth cousin once removed of John Condit, Lewis Condict and Charles Yale.
  Political family: Kellogg-Adams-Seymour-Chapin family of Connecticut and New York (subset of the Four Thousand Related Politicians).
  See also Find-A-Grave memorial
  Aaron Kitchell (1744-1820) — of Hanover, Morris County, N.J. Born in Hanover, Morris County, N.J., July 10, 1744. Democrat. Member of New Jersey state house of assembly from Morris County, 1781-82, 1784, 1786-90, 1793-94, 1797, 1801-04, 1809; U.S. Representative from New Jersey, 1791-93, 1795-97, 1799-1801 (at-large 1791-93, 1795-97, 2nd District 1799-1801); U.S. Senator from New Jersey, 1805-09. Died June 25, 1820 (age 75 years, 351 days). Interment at Presbyterian Churchyard, Hanover, N.J.
  Relatives: Son of Joseph Kitchell and Rachel (Bates) Kitchell; married 1767 to Phebe Farrand; great-grandfather of Elias Mulford Condit; second cousin once removed of Abraham Davenport (1715-1789); second cousin thrice removed of Albert Pierson Condit; second cousin four times removed of John Holbrook Chapman; second cousin five times removed of Raymond Schofield Curtice; third cousin of John Davenport and James Davenport; third cousin once removed of Abraham Davenport (1767-1837) and Theodore Davenport; third cousin twice removed of Thaddeus Betts and Edward Green Bradford; third cousin thrice removed of Joseph Pomeroy Root and Edward Green Bradford II.
  Political families: DuPont family of Wilmington, Delaware; Livingston-Schuyler family of New York; Kellogg-Adams-Seymour-Chapin family of Connecticut and New York (subsets of the Four Thousand Related Politicians).
  See also congressional biography — Govtrack.us page
  John Davenport (1752-1830) — of Stamford, Fairfield County, Conn. Born in Stamford, Fairfield County, Conn., January 16, 1752. Member of Connecticut state house of representatives, 1776; postmaster at Stamford, Conn., 1787-92; U.S. Representative from Connecticut, 1799-1817 (at-large 1799-1805, 2nd District 1805-07, at-large 1807-09, 3rd District 1809-11, at-large 1811-17). Died in Stamford, Fairfield County, Conn., November 28, 1830 (age 78 years, 316 days). Interment at Northfield Cemetery, Stamford, Conn.
  Relatives: Son of Abraham Davenport (1715-1789) and Elizabeth (Huntington) Davenport; brother of James Davenport; married to Mary Sylvester Welles; father of Theodore Davenport; first cousin of Henry Huntington and Gurdon Huntington; first cousin once removed of Pierpont Edwards, Abraham Davenport (1767-1837) and Benjamin Nicoll Huntington; first cousin twice removed of Thaddeus Betts; first cousin thrice removed of Joseph Pomeroy Root; first cousin five times removed of Alfred Collins Lockwood and Randolph Appleton Kidder; second cousin of Aaron Burr, Theodore Dwight, Abel Huntington and Henry Waggaman Edwards; second cousin once removed of Samuel Huntington; second cousin twice removed of Benjamin Huntington and Roger Wolcott; second cousin thrice removed of Evert Harris Kittell; second cousin four times removed of John Foster Dulles and Allen Welsh Dulles; second cousin five times removed of Arthur Callen Kittell Jr.; third cousin of Aaron Kitchell, Joshua Coit, Samuel H. Huntington, Augustus Seymour Porter (1769-1849) and Peter Buell Porter; third cousin once removed of Ebenezer Huntington, Zina Hyde Jr., Charles Robert Sherman, Nathaniel Huntington, James Huntington, Augustus Seymour Porter (1798-1872), Joseph Lyman Huntington, Peter Buell Porter Jr., Elisha Mills Huntington and Peter Augustus Porter (1827-1864); third cousin twice removed of William Woodbridge, Jabez Williams Huntington, Isaac Backus, John Hall Brockway, Henry Titus Backus, Charles Taylor Sherman, John Appleton, Edward Green Bradford, William Tecumseh Sherman, Lampson Parker Sherman, Ulysses Simpson Grant, John Sherman, Robert Coit Jr., Collins Dwight Huntington, George Milo Huntington, Thomas Worcester Hyde, Alonzo Mark Leffingwell, Abial Lathrop, Peter Augustus Porter (1853-1925) and Edward Williams Hooker; third cousin thrice removed of Alexander Hamilton Waterman, Matthew Griswold, George Douglas Perkins, Elias Mulford Condit, Ezekiel Gilbert Stoddard, Edward Green Bradford II, Frederick Dent Grant, Ulysses Simpson Grant Jr., William Barret Ridgely, Charles Edward Hyde, Clement Phineas Kellogg, Herman Arod Gager, William Brainard Coit, John Sedgwick Hyde, Edward Warden Hyde, John Leffingwell Randolph, George Leffingwell Reed and Blanche M. Woodward; fourth cousin of Chauncey Goodrich, Elizur Goodrich and Hezekiah Case; fourth cousin once removed of Parmenio Adams, Ambrose Tuttle, Jesse Hoyt, Abiel Case, Charles Phelps Huntington, Jairus Case, John Arnold Rockwell, John Leslie Russell, George Washington Wolcott, William Dean Kellogg and Almon Case.
  Political families: Conger family of New York; Kellogg-Adams-Seymour-Chapin family of Connecticut and New York; Lockwood-Lanning family of New Jersey (subsets of the Four Thousand Related Politicians).
  See also congressional biography — Govtrack.us page — Wikipedia article — Find-A-Grave memorial
  John Condit (1755-1834) — of Orange, Essex County, N.J. Born in Orange, Essex County, N.J., July 8, 1755. Democrat. Physician; surgeon; member of New Jersey state house of assembly from Essex County, 1788-89; U.S. Representative from New Jersey 1st District, 1799-1803, 1819; U.S. Senator from New Jersey, 1803-09, 1809-17. Slaveowner. Died in Orange, Essex County, N.J., May 4, 1834 (age 78 years, 300 days). Interment at First Presbyterian Churchyard, Orange, N.J.
  Relatives: Son of Samuel Condit and Mary (Smith) Condit; married 1776 to Abigail Halsey; married 1785 to Rhoda Halsey; father of Silas Condit; granduncle of Albert Pierson Condit and Amzi Condit; third great-grandson of Robert Treat; first cousin once removed of Silas Condict; first cousin twice removed of Elias Mulford Condit; second cousin of Lewis Condict; second cousin once removed of Israel Dodd Condit and Alfred Henry Condict; second cousin twice removed of Robert Treat Paine, Augustus William Cutler and Fillmore Condit; second cousin thrice removed of Simeon Harrison Rollinson; second cousin four times removed of Perry Amherst Carpenter; third cousin once removed of Simeon Harrison; third cousin thrice removed of Wallace Bruce Crumb; fourth cousin of Henry Waggaman Edwards and Aurelius Buckingham; fourth cousin once removed of Philip Frisbee, Philo Beecher Buckingham, Alanson B. Treat, Charles M. Hotchkiss and David Leroy Treat.
  Political families: Kellogg-Adams-Seymour-Chapin family of Connecticut and New York; Eastman family; Condit family of Orange, New Jersey (subsets of the Four Thousand Related Politicians).
  See also congressional biography — Govtrack.us page — Find-A-Grave memorial
  James Davenport (1758-1797) — of Stamford, Fairfield County, Conn. Born in Stamford, Fairfield County, Conn., October 12, 1758. Lawyer; member of Connecticut state house of representatives, 1785; member of Connecticut council of assistants, 1790-96; common pleas court judge in Connecticut, 1792; U.S. Representative from Connecticut at-large, 1796-97; died in office 1797. Died in Stamford, Fairfield County, Conn., August 3, 1797 (age 38 years, 295 days). Interment at Northfield Cemetery, Stamford, Conn.
  Relatives: Son of Abraham Davenport (1715-1789) and Elizabeth (Huntington) Davenport; brother of John Davenport; married, May 7, 1777, to Abigail Fitch; married, November 6, 1790, to Mehitable Coggeshall; uncle of Theodore Davenport; first cousin of Henry Huntington and Gurdon Huntington; first cousin once removed of Pierpont Edwards, Abraham Davenport (1767-1837) and Benjamin Nicoll Huntington; first cousin twice removed of Thaddeus Betts; first cousin thrice removed of Joseph Pomeroy Root; first cousin five times removed of Alfred Collins Lockwood and Randolph Appleton Kidder; second cousin of Aaron Burr, Theodore Dwight, Abel Huntington and Henry Waggaman Edwards; second cousin once removed of Samuel Huntington; second cousin twice removed of Benjamin Huntington and Roger Wolcott; second cousin thrice removed of Evert Harris Kittell; second cousin four times removed of John Foster Dulles and Allen Welsh Dulles; second cousin five times removed of Arthur Callen Kittell Jr.; third cousin of Aaron Kitchell, Joshua Coit, Samuel H. Huntington, Augustus Seymour Porter (1769-1849) and Peter Buell Porter; third cousin once removed of Ebenezer Huntington, Zina Hyde Jr., Charles Robert Sherman, Nathaniel Huntington, James Huntington, Augustus Seymour Porter (1798-1872), Joseph Lyman Huntington, Peter Buell Porter Jr., Elisha Mills Huntington and Peter Augustus Porter (1827-1864); third cousin twice removed of William Woodbridge, Jabez Williams Huntington, Isaac Backus, John Hall Brockway, Henry Titus Backus, Charles Taylor Sherman, John Appleton, Edward Green Bradford, William Tecumseh Sherman, Lampson Parker Sherman, Ulysses Simpson Grant, John Sherman, Robert Coit Jr., Collins Dwight Huntington, George Milo Huntington, Thomas Worcester Hyde, Alonzo Mark Leffingwell, Abial Lathrop, Peter Augustus Porter (1853-1925) and Edward Williams Hooker; third cousin thrice removed of Alexander Hamilton Waterman, Matthew Griswold, George Douglas Perkins, Elias Mulford Condit, Ezekiel Gilbert Stoddard, Edward Green Bradford II, Frederick Dent Grant, Ulysses Simpson Grant Jr., William Barret Ridgely, Charles Edward Hyde, Clement Phineas Kellogg, Herman Arod Gager, William Brainard Coit, John Sedgwick Hyde, Edward Warden Hyde, John Leffingwell Randolph, George Leffingwell Reed and Blanche M. Woodward; fourth cousin of Chauncey Goodrich, Elizur Goodrich and Hezekiah Case; fourth cousin once removed of Parmenio Adams, Ambrose Tuttle, Jesse Hoyt, Abiel Case, Charles Phelps Huntington, Jairus Case, John Arnold Rockwell, John Leslie Russell, George Washington Wolcott, William Dean Kellogg and Almon Case.
  Political families: Conger family of New York; Kellogg-Adams-Seymour-Chapin family of Connecticut and New York; Lockwood-Lanning family of New Jersey (subsets of the Four Thousand Related Politicians).
  See also congressional biography — Govtrack.us page — Wikipedia article — Find-A-Grave memorial
  Smith Thompson (1768-1843) — of Dutchess County, N.Y. Born in Dutchess County, N.Y., January 17, 1768. Lawyer; member of New York state assembly from Dutchess County, 1800-01; delegate to New York state constitutional convention, 1801; Justice of New York Supreme Court, 1802-18; U.S. Secretary of the Navy, 1819-23; Associate Justice of U.S. Supreme Court, 1823-43; died in office 1843; candidate for Governor of New York, 1828. Presbyterian. Died in Poughkeepsie, Dutchess County, N.Y., December 18, 1843 (age 75 years, 335 days). Interment at Poughkeepsie Rural Cemetery, Poughkeepsie, N.Y.
  Relatives: Son of Ezra Thompson and Rachel (Smith) Thompson; married, April 30, 1795, to Sarah Livingston; married 1836 to Elizabeth Davenport Livingston; father of Gilbert Livingston Thompson; uncle of Jacob Livingston Sutherland; great-grandfather of Guy Vernor Henry; second cousin of Enos Thompson Throop, George Bliss Throop and Israel Thompson Hatch; second cousin once removed of Israel Dodd Condit; second cousin thrice removed of Mary Mather Hooker; third cousin twice removed of Jacob Clark Pike; third cousin thrice removed of Sumner Tucker Pike, Doris Pike, Moses Bernard Pike and Frank Avery Pike; fourth cousin once removed of Alvah Nash.
  Political families: Livingston-Schuyler family of New York; Thompson-Sutherland family of New York (subsets of the Four Thousand Related Politicians).
  See also NNDB dossier — Find-A-Grave memorial
  Isaac Pierson (1770-1833) — of Orange, Essex County, N.J. Born in Orange, Essex County, N.J., August 15, 1770. U.S. Representative from New Jersey at-large, 1827-31. Slaveowner. Died in Orange, Essex County, N.J., September 22, 1833 (age 63 years, 38 days). Original interment at Old Burying Ground, Orange, N.J.; reinterment in 1840 at Rosedale Cemetery, Orange, N.J.
  Relatives: Son of Matthias Pierson and Phebe (Nutman) Pierson; married, December 29, 1795, to Nancy Crane; grandfather of Albert Pierson Condit.
  Political families: Condit family of Orange, New Jersey; Kellogg-Adams-Seymour-Chapin family of Connecticut and New York (subsets of the Four Thousand Related Politicians).
  See also congressional biography — Govtrack.us page — Find-A-Grave memorial
  Lewis Condict (1772-1862) — of Morristown, Morris County, N.J. Born in Morristown, Morris County, N.J., March 3, 1772. Member of New Jersey state house of assembly from Morris County, 1805-09, 1837-38; U.S. Representative from New Jersey, 1811-17, 1821-33 (at-large 1811-13, 1st District 1813-17, at-large 1821-23, 1st District 1823-25, at-large 1825-33). Died in Morristown, Morris County, N.J., May 26, 1862 (age 90 years, 84 days). Interment at First Presbyterian Church Cemetery, Morristown, N.J.
  Relatives: Son of Peter Condict and Annie (Byram) Condict; married to Martha Woodhull and Martina Elmendorf; nephew of Silas Condict; first cousin twice removed of Augustus William Cutler; second cousin of John Condit; second cousin once removed of Silas Condit, Israel Dodd Condit and Alfred Henry Condict; second cousin twice removed of Albert Pierson Condit, Amzi Condit, Elias Mulford Condit and Fillmore Condit; third cousin once removed of Simeon Harrison; third cousin thrice removed of Simeon Harrison Rollinson; fourth cousin once removed of Philip Frisbee.
  Political families: Pike family of Lubec, Maine; Condit family of Orange, New Jersey; Livingston-Schuyler family of New York; Edwards-Davenport-Thompson-Hooker family of Connecticut; DeCamp-Hinchman family of New Jersey; Thompson-Sutherland family of New York (subsets of the Four Thousand Related Politicians).
  See also congressional biography — Govtrack.us page — Find-A-Grave memorial
  Silas Condit (1778-1861) — of Newark, Essex County, N.J. Born in Orange, Essex County, N.J., August 18, 1778. U.S. Representative from New Jersey at-large, 1831-33. Died in Newark, Essex County, N.J., November 29, 1861 (age 83 years, 103 days). Interment at First Presbyterian Church Cemetery, Newark, N.J.
  Relatives: Son of John Condit and Abigail (Halsey) Condit; fourth great-grandson of Robert Treat; first cousin once removed of Albert Pierson Condit and Amzi Condit; first cousin twice removed of Silas Condict; second cousin once removed of Lewis Condict and Elias Mulford Condit; second cousin thrice removed of Robert Treat Paine; third cousin of Israel Dodd Condit and Alfred Henry Condict; third cousin once removed of Augustus William Cutler and Fillmore Condit; third cousin twice removed of Simeon Harrison Rollinson; third cousin thrice removed of Perry Amherst Carpenter; fourth cousin of Simeon Harrison; fourth cousin once removed of Henry Waggaman Edwards and Aurelius Buckingham.
  Political families: Kellogg-Adams-Seymour-Chapin family of Connecticut and New York; Eastman family; Condit family of Orange, New Jersey (subsets of the Four Thousand Related Politicians).
  See also congressional biography — Govtrack.us page
  Henry Waggaman Edwards (1779-1847) — also known as Henry W. Edwards — of New Haven, New Haven County, Conn. Born in New Haven, New Haven County, Conn., October, 1779. Democrat. Lawyer; U.S. Representative from Connecticut at-large, 1819-23; U.S. Senator from Connecticut, 1823-27; member of Connecticut state senate at-large, 1828-29; member of Connecticut state house of representatives from New Haven, 1830; Speaker of the Connecticut State House of Representatives, 1830; Governor of Connecticut, 1833-34, 1835-38. Died in New Haven, New Haven County, Conn., July 22, 1847 (age 67 years, 0 days). Interment at Grove Street Cemetery, New Haven, Conn.
  Relatives: Son of Frances (Ogden) Edwards and Pierpont Edwards; married to Lydia Miller; third great-grandson of Thomas Willett; first cousin of Aaron Burr and Theodore Dwight; second cousin of John Davenport and James Davenport; second cousin once removed of Theodore Davenport; second cousin thrice removed of Evert Harris Kittell; second cousin five times removed of Arthur Callen Kittell Jr.; third cousin of Benjamin Tallmadge; third cousin once removed of Charles Robert Sherman, Frederick Augustus Tallmadge and Simeon Harrison; third cousin twice removed of Charles Taylor Sherman, John Appleton, William Tecumseh Sherman, Lampson Parker Sherman, John Sherman, Joseph Pomeroy Root and Edward Williams Hooker; third cousin thrice removed of Ezekiel Gilbert Stoddard, George Landon Ingraham, Simeon Harrison Rollinson, Charles Dunsmore Millard and Blanche M. Woodward; fourth cousin of Noah Phelps, John Condit and Hezekiah Case; fourth cousin once removed of Parmenio Adams, Silas Condit, Elisha Phelps, Ambrose Tuttle, Jesse Hoyt, Abiel Case, Stephen Whitaker Fullerton, Jairus Case, John Leslie Russell, George Washington Wolcott, William Dean Kellogg and Almon Case.
  Political families: Morris-Ingersoll family of New York and Connecticut; Kellogg-Adams-Seymour-Chapin family of Connecticut and New York; Sargent-Davis-Pike-Flanders family of New Hampshire; Livingston-Schuyler family of New York (subsets of the Four Thousand Related Politicians).
  See also congressional biography — Govtrack.us page — National Governors Association biography — Wikipedia article — Find-A-Grave memorial
  Calvin Frisbie (1780-1846) — of Branford, New Haven County, Conn. Born in Branford, New Haven County, Conn., April 30, 1780. Member of Connecticut state house of representatives from Branford, 1824. Died in Branford, New Haven County, Conn., January 7, 1846 (age 65 years, 252 days). Interment at Branford Center Cemetery, Branford, Conn.
  Relatives: Son of Joseph Frisbie and Sarah (Rogers) Frisbie; married, June 12, 1805, to Polly Harrison; second cousin once removed of Philip Frisbee, Erwin J. Baldwin and Francis Everett Baldwin; second cousin four times removed of George Franklin Chapin; third cousin of Henry Taintor; third cousin once removed of John Taintor, Roger Taintor and Solomon Taintor; third cousin twice removed of Aaron Kellogg, Alonzo Thompson Frisbee and Anson Foster Keeler; fourth cousin of DeGrasse Maltby, John Adams Taintor, Ralph Smith Taintor and Henry G. Taintor; fourth cousin once removed of Silas Condict, Jason Kellogg, Orsamus Cook Merrill, Timothy Merrill, Asa H. Otis, Henry Clinton Frisbee, Charles Newhall Taintor, Robert Cleveland Usher, Charles Brown Frisbie, Edward Silsby Farrington and Wallace Rider Farrington.
  Political families: Kellogg-Adams-Seymour-Chapin family of Connecticut and New York; Murphy-Merrill family of Harbor Beach, Michigan (subsets of the Four Thousand Related Politicians).
  See also Find-A-Grave memorial
  Jacob Livingston Sutherland (1788-1845) — also known as Jacob Sutherland — of North Blenheim, Schoharie County, N.Y. Born in Bangall, Dutchess County, N.Y., June 4, 1788. Lawyer; U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of New York, 1819-23; delegate to New York state constitutional convention, 1821; elected New York state senate 3rd District 1822, but never took office; Justice of New York Supreme Court, 1822-35; candidate for Presidential Elector for New York. Died in Albany, Albany County, N.Y., May 12, 1845 (age 56 years, 342 days). Interment at Washington Street Cemetery, Geneva, N.Y.
  Relatives: Son of Solomon D. Sutherland and Tamma (Thompson) Sutherland; married, September 18, 1811, to Frances Lansing (daughter of John Ten Eyck Lansing Jr.); nephew of Smith Thompson; first cousin of Matthias Burnett Tallmadge, James Tallmadge Jr. and Gilbert Livingston Thompson; first cousin twice removed of Guy Vernor Henry; second cousin once removed of Enos Thompson Throop, George Bliss Throop and Israel Thompson Hatch; third cousin of Israel Dodd Condit; third cousin twice removed of Mary Mather Hooker; fourth cousin once removed of Jacob Clark Pike.
  Political families: Livingston-Schuyler family of New York; Thompson-Sutherland family of New York (subsets of the Four Thousand Related Politicians).
  See also Find-A-Grave memorial
  Aurelius Buckingham (1793-1884) — of Oxford, New Haven County, Conn. Born in Oxford, New Haven County, Conn., November 30, 1793. Farmer; member of Connecticut state house of representatives from Oxford, 1838. Congregationalist. Died in Oxford, New Haven County, Conn., July 24, 1884 (age 90 years, 237 days). Interment at Jack's Hill Cemetery, Oxford, Conn.
  Relatives: Son of Esther (Norton) Buckingham and Samuel Andrew Buckingham; married, November 30, 1819, to Laura Beecher; father of Philo Beecher Buckingham; third great-grandson of Robert Treat; fifth great-grandson of Thomas Welles; second cousin twice removed of Robert Treat Paine and Edward Taylor Buckingham; third cousin once removed of Charles M. Hotchkiss; third cousin twice removed of George Tracy Buckingham; third cousin thrice removed of Joseph Clark Baldwin III; fourth cousin of John Condit; fourth cousin once removed of Silas Condit, Earle Buckingham, Alanson B. Treat, David Leroy Treat and Omar William Platt.
  Political families: Kellogg-Adams-Seymour-Chapin family of Connecticut and New York; Condit family of Orange, New Jersey (subsets of the Four Thousand Related Politicians).
  See also Find-A-Grave memorial
  Gilbert Livingston Thompson (1796-1874) — also known as Gilbert L. Thompson — Born in Poughkeepsie, Dutchess County, N.Y., June 20, 1796. U.S. Special Diplomatic Agent to Cuba, 1821; Mexico, 1844. Died July 4, 1874 (age 78 years, 14 days). Interment at St. John's Cemetery, Ellicott City, Md.
  Relatives: Son of Smith Thompson and Sarah (Livingston) Thompson; married, June 17, 1818, to Arietta Minthorne (Tompkins) Tompkins (daughter of Daniel D. Tompkins and Hannah Tompkins); married, February 23, 1839, to Mary Ann Tolley Worthington Dorsey (daughter of Thomas Beale Dorsey); grandfather of Guy Vernor Henry; great-grandnephew of Robert Gilbert Livingston; second great-grandson of Gilbert Livingston; second great-grandnephew of John Livingston and Robert Livingston (1688-1775); third great-grandson of Robert Livingston the Elder; third great-grandnephew of Pieter Schuyler (1657-1724) and Johannes Schuyler (1668-1747); first cousin of Jacob Livingston Sutherland; first cousin twice removed of Philip Van Cortlandt and Pierre Van Cortlandt Jr.; first cousin thrice removed of Robert Livingston (1708-1790), Peter Van Brugh Livingston, Philip Livingston, Robert R. Livingston (1718-1775) and William Livingston; first cousin four times removed of Robert Livingston the Younger and Johannes Schuyler (1697-1746); first cousin five times removed of David Davidse Schuyler and Myndert Davidtse Schuyler; second cousin once removed of Enos Thompson Throop, George Bliss Throop, Hamilton Fish (1808-1893) and Israel Thompson Hatch; second cousin twice removed of Peter Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter Livingston, Philip Peter Livingston, Robert R. Livingston (1746-1813), Henry Brockholst Livingston and Edward Livingston (1764-1836); second cousin thrice removed of Stephanus Bayard, Pierre Van Cortlandt, Philip John Schuyler, Philip P. Schuyler and Stephen John Schuyler; third cousin of Israel Dodd Condit, Nicholas Fish and Hamilton Fish Jr. (1849-1936); third cousin once removed of Stephen Van Rensselaer, Philip Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Henry Walter Livingston, Peter Augustus Jay, Rensselaer Westerlo, Edward Philip Livingston, William Alexander Duer, John Duer, William Jay, Charles Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873), Jonathan Mayhew Wainwright and Hamilton Fish Jr. (1888-1991); third cousin twice removed of Nicholas Bayard, Jeremiah Van Rensselaer, Robert Van Rensselaer, Pieter Schuyler (1746-1792), James Livingston, Peter Samuel Schuyler, Philip Jeremiah Schuyler, James Parker, Mary Mather Hooker, Montgomery Schuyler Jr. and Hamilton Fish Jr. (1926-1996); third cousin thrice removed of Hamilton Fish (born 1951) and Alexa Fish Ward; fourth cousin of Philip Schuyler, Peter Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Edward Livingston (1796-1840), William Duer, Henry Bell Van Rensselaer, Denning Duer, Henry Brockholst Ledyard, John Jay II and John Jacob Astor III; fourth cousin once removed of Peter Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Jacob Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Maturin Livingston, James Alexander Hamilton, George Washington Schuyler, John Cortlandt Parker, Philip N. Schuyler, Kiliaen Van Rensselaer, William Waldorf Astor, John Kean, Jacob Clark Pike, Hamilton Fish Kean and Charles Ludlow Livingston (born 1870).
  Political families: Livingston-Schuyler family of New York; VanRensselaer family of Albany, New York (subsets of the Four Thousand Related Politicians).
  See also U.S. State Dept career summary — Find-A-Grave memorial
  Israel Dodd Condit (1802-1897) — also known as Israel D. Condit — of Millburn, Essex County, N.J. Born in Orange, Essex County, N.J., July 9, 1802. Hat manufacturer; member of New Jersey state house of assembly from Essex County, 1867. Episcopalian. Died in Millburn, Essex County, N.J., January 29, 1897 (age 94 years, 204 days). Interment at St. Stephens Episcopal Cemetery, Millburn, N.J.
  Relatives: Son of John Condit (1766-1803) and Mary (Dodd) Condit; married to Caroline Eaglesfield; first cousin twice removed of Silas Condict; second cousin once removed of John Condit (1755-1834), Smith Thompson and Lewis Condict; third cousin of Silas Condit, Jacob Livingston Sutherland, Gilbert Livingston Thompson and Alfred Henry Condict; third cousin once removed of Augustus William Cutler, Albert Pierson Condit, Amzi Condit, Elias Mulford Condit, George Ezra DeCamp and Fillmore Condit; third cousin twice removed of Guy Vernor Henry and Mary Mather Hooker; fourth cousin of Simeon Harrison; fourth cousin once removed of Jacob Clark Pike.
  Political families: Pike family of Lubec, Maine; Condit family of Orange, New Jersey; Livingston-Schuyler family of New York; Thompson-Sutherland family of New York (subsets of the Four Thousand Related Politicians).
  See also Find-A-Grave memorial
  Simeon Harrison (1804-1872) — of Essex County, N.J. Born in Orange, Essex County, N.J., February 17, 1804. Member of New Jersey state house of assembly from Essex County, 1858. Died in South Orange, Essex County, N.J., March 26, 1872 (age 68 years, 38 days). Interment at St. Mark's Episcopal Cemetery, Orange, N.J.
  Relatives: Son of Keturah (Crane) Harrison and Caleb Harrison; married 1834 to Abigail Maria Condit; grandfather of Simeon Harrison Rollinson; second cousin twice removed of Silas Condict; third cousin once removed of John Condit, Lewis Condict, Henry Waggaman Edwards and Elias Mulford Condit; fourth cousin of Silas Condit, Israel Dodd Condit, Alfred Henry Condict and Albert Pierson Condit; fourth cousin once removed of Augustus William Cutler, Amzi Condit and Fillmore Condit.
  Political families: Kellogg-Adams-Seymour-Chapin family of Connecticut and New York; Eastman family; Condit family of Orange, New Jersey (subsets of the Four Thousand Related Politicians).
  See also Find-A-Grave memorial
  Francis William Kellogg (1810-1879) — also known as Francis W. Kellogg — of Grand Rapids, Kent County, Mich.; Mobile, Mobile County, Ala. Born in Worthington, Hampshire County, Mass., May 30, 1810. Republican. Lumber business; member of Michigan state house of representatives from Kent County 2nd District, 1857-58; U.S. Representative from Michigan, 1859-65 (3rd District 1859-63, 4th District 1863-65); U.S. Collector of Internal Revenue for the 1st Alabama District, 1865-67; U.S. Representative from Alabama 1st District, 1868-69. Died in Alliance, Stark County, Ohio, January 13, 1879 (age 68 years, 228 days). Interment at Fulton Street Cemetery, Grand Rapids, Mich.
  Relatives: Son of Giles Crouch Kellogg and Eunice Palmer (Cottrell) Kellogg; married, March 24, 1832, to Emeline White; fifth great-grandnephew of Thomas Welles; first cousin twice removed of Aaron Kellogg; third cousin of Greene Carrier Bronson, John Russell Kellogg and George Smith Catlin; third cousin once removed of Jason Kellogg, Charles Kellogg (1773-1842), Orsamus Cook Merrill, Timothy Merrill, Daniel Fiske Kellogg, Joshua Perkins, George Isaac Sherwood, Arthur Tappan Kellogg, David B. Sherwood, Selah Merrill and Eli Coe Birdsey (1843-1929); third cousin twice removed of Josiah Cowles, Simeon Baldwin, Carl G. Sherwood, William Lucius Case and Edward Russell Kellogg; third cousin thrice removed of Leonard Leach Case; fourth cousin of Luther Walter Badger, Silas Dewey Kellogg, Chester Ashley, Daniel Kellogg (1791-1875), Alvan Kellogg, Alvah Nash, Day Otis Kellogg, Dwight Kellogg, Albert Gallatin Kellogg, Ensign Hosmer Kellogg, Farrand Fassett Merrill and Charles Kellogg (1839-1903); fourth cousin once removed of Silas Condict, Abel Merrill, James Doolittle Wooster, Daniel Upson, Roger Sherman Baldwin, Eli Coe Birdsey (1799-1843), Orlando Kellogg, William Dean Kellogg, Stephen Wright Kellogg, Benjamin Doolittle, George Bradley Kellogg, William Pitt Kellogg, Daniel Kellogg (1835-1918), Austin George Nettleton, Nelson Platt Wheeler, William Egbert Wheeler and Benjamin Baker Merrill.
  Political family: Kellogg-Adams-Seymour-Chapin family of Connecticut and New York (subset of the Four Thousand Related Politicians).
  See also congressional biography — Govtrack.us page — Find-A-Grave memorial
  Philo Beecher Buckingham (1820-1891) — also known as Philo B. Buckingham — of Seymour, New Haven County, Conn.; Fair Haven, New Haven, New Haven County, Conn. Born in Oxford, New Haven County, Conn., June 6, 1820. Member of Connecticut state senate 5th District, 1855; colonel in the Union Army during the Civil War. Died December 5, 1891 (age 71 years, 182 days). Burial location unknown.
  Relatives: Son of Aurelius Buckingham and Laura (Beecher) Buckingham; married, October 12, 1842, to Sally Caroline Perkins; fourth great-grandson of Robert Treat; sixth great-grandson of Thomas Welles; first cousin once removed of Glover Wheeler Cable; second cousin once removed of Alton Farrel; second cousin thrice removed of Robert Treat Paine; third cousin once removed of Edward Taylor Buckingham; fourth cousin of Charles M. Hotchkiss; fourth cousin once removed of John Condit, Gideon Hotchkiss, Asahel Augustus Hotchkiss, Julius Hotchkiss, Giles Waldo Hotchkiss and George Tracy Buckingham.
  Political families: Kellogg-Adams-Seymour-Chapin family of Connecticut and New York; Condit family of Orange, New Jersey (subsets of the Four Thousand Related Politicians).
  Alfred Henry Condict (1824-1904) — also known as Alfred H. Condict — of Mansfield, Richland County, Ohio. Born in Morristown, Morris County, N.J., February 20, 1824. Republican. Served in the Union Army during the Civil War; candidate for Ohio state house of representatives from Richland County, 1897. Died in Washington, D.C., March 16, 1904 (age 80 years, 25 days). Interment at Evergreen Cemetery, Morristown, N.J.
  Relatives: Son of Silas Haines Condict and Joanna (Dickerson) Condict; married, November 2, 1847, to Harriet Ann Stiles; married, October 19, 1854, to Margaretta 'Aretta' Garrabrant; first cousin twice removed of Silas Condict; second cousin once removed of John Condit, Lewis Condict and Fillmore Condit; third cousin of Silas Condit and Israel Dodd Condit; third cousin once removed of Augustus William Cutler, Albert Pierson Condit, Amzi Condit and Elias Mulford Condit; fourth cousin of Simeon Harrison.
  Political families: Kellogg-Adams-Seymour-Chapin family of Connecticut and New York; Eastman family; Condit family of Orange, New Jersey (subsets of the Four Thousand Related Politicians).
  See also Find-A-Grave memorial
  Augustus William Cutler (1827-1897) — also known as Augustus W. Cutler — of Morristown, Morris County, N.J. Born in Morristown, Morris County, N.J., October 22, 1827. Democrat. Lawyer; member of New Jersey state senate from Morris County, 1872-74; U.S. Representative from New Jersey 5th District, 1875-79. Died in Morristown, Morris County, N.J., January 1, 1897 (age 69 years, 71 days). Interment at Evergreen Cemetery, Morristown, N.J.
  Relatives: Son of Joseph Cutler and Elizabeth Phebe (Cook) Cutler; married 1856 to Julia Rebecca Walker; great-grandson of Silas Condict; first cousin twice removed of Lewis Condict; second cousin twice removed of John Condit; third cousin once removed of Silas Condit, Israel Dodd Condit and Alfred Henry Condict; fourth cousin of Albert Pierson Condit, Amzi Condit, Elias Mulford Condit and Fillmore Condit; fourth cousin once removed of Simeon Harrison.
  Political families: Kellogg-Adams-Seymour-Chapin family of Connecticut and New York; Eastman family; Condit family of Orange, New Jersey (subsets of the Four Thousand Related Politicians).
  See also congressional biography — Govtrack.us page — Find-A-Grave memorial
  Albert Pierson Condit (1829-1901) — also known as Albert P. Condit — of East Orange, Essex County, N.J. Born in Orange, Essex County, N.J., December 10, 1829. Lawyer; member of New Jersey state house of assembly from Essex County, 1866-67, 1871. Died in Orange, Essex County, N.J., December 14, 1901 (age 72 years, 4 days). Interment at Rosedale Cemetery, Orange, N.J.
  Relatives: Son of Stephen Condit and Phebe Stockton (Pierson) Condit; grandson of Isaac Pierson; grandnephew of John Condit; fifth great-grandson of Robert Treat; first cousin once removed of Silas Condit; first cousin thrice removed of Silas Condict; second cousin of Amzi Condit and Elias Mulford Condit; second cousin twice removed of Lewis Condict; second cousin thrice removed of Aaron Kitchell; second cousin four times removed of Robert Treat Paine; third cousin once removed of Israel Dodd Condit and Alfred Henry Condict; fourth cousin of Simeon Harrison, Augustus William Cutler and Fillmore Condit; fourth cousin once removed of Simeon Harrison Rollinson.
  Political families: Kellogg-Adams-Seymour-Chapin family of Connecticut and New York; Eastman family; Condit family of Orange, New Jersey (subsets of the Four Thousand Related Politicians).
  See also Find-A-Grave memorial
  Amzi Condit (1830-1865) — of Essex County, N.J. Born in Orange, Essex County, N.J., June 18, 1830. Member of New Jersey state house of assembly from Essex County, 1859-60. Died in Orange, Essex County, N.J., February 6, 1865 (age 34 years, 233 days). Burial location unknown.
  Relatives: Son of Aaron Munn Condit and Louisa (Pierson) Condit; married, August 22, 1854, to Catherine Halstead; grandnephew of John Condit; first cousin once removed of Silas Condit; first cousin thrice removed of Silas Condict; second cousin of Albert Pierson Condit; second cousin twice removed of Lewis Condict; third cousin of Elias Mulford Condit; third cousin once removed of Israel Dodd Condit and Alfred Henry Condict; fourth cousin of Augustus William Cutler and Fillmore Condit; fourth cousin once removed of Simeon Harrison.
  Political families: Kellogg-Adams-Seymour-Chapin family of Connecticut and New York; Eastman family; Condit family of Orange, New Jersey (subsets of the Four Thousand Related Politicians).
  Frederick Walker Pitkin (1837-1886) — also known as Frederick W. Pitkin — of Pueblo, Pueblo County, Colo. Born in Manchester, Hartford County, Conn., August 31, 1837. Lawyer; Governor of Colorado, 1879-83. Died in Pueblo, Pueblo County, Colo., December 18, 1886 (age 49 years, 109 days). Interment at Fairmount Cemetery, Denver, Colo.
  Relatives: Son of Eli Pitkin and Hannah M. (Torrey) Pitkin; married, June 17, 1862, to Fidelia Maria James; second great-grandnephew of William Pitkin; first cousin four times removed of William Greene; first cousin five times removed of Roger Wolcott; second cousin twice removed of Timothy Pitkin; second cousin thrice removed of William Greene Jr. and Daniel Pitkin; second cousin four times removed of Erastus Wolcott and Oliver Wolcott Sr.; third cousin of George Eastman; third cousin twice removed of Ray Greene; third cousin thrice removed of Josiah Cowles, Thomas Chittenden, Return Jonathan Meigs, Sr., Moses Seymour, Josiah Meigs, Oliver Wolcott Jr., Roger Griswold and Frederick Wolcott; fourth cousin of Abel Madison Scranton and Joseph Pomeroy Root; fourth cousin once removed of Silas Condict, Ensign Hosmer Kellogg, John Robert Graham Pitkin, Clarence Horatio Pitkin, Carroll Peabody Pitkin, Caleb Seymour Pitkin and Eldred C. Pitkin.
  Political families: Kellogg-Adams-Seymour-Chapin family of Connecticut and New York; Beakes-Greene-Witter family; Upham family (subsets of the Four Thousand Related Politicians).
  Pitkin County, Colo. is named for him.
  See also National Governors Association biography — Find-A-Grave memorial
  Guy Vernor Henry (1839-1899) — also known as Guy V. Henry — Born in Fort Smith, Sebastian County, Ark., March 9, 1839. Colonel in the Union Army during the Civil War; received the Medal of Honor in 1893 for action at the Battle of Cold Harbor, June 1, 1864; colonel in the U.S. Army during the Spanish-American War; Governor of Puerto Rico. Died, from pneumonia, in Manhattan, New York County, N.Y., October 27, 1899 (age 60 years, 232 days). Interment at Arlington National Cemetery, Arlington, Va.
  Relatives: Son of William Seton Henry and Arietta Livingston (Thompson) Henry; married 1864 to Frances Wharton; married to Julia McNair; grandson of John Vernon Henry and Gilbert Livingston Thompson; grandnephew of Mangle Minthorne Tompkins; great-grandson of Smith Thompson, Daniel D. Tompkins and Hannah Tompkins; great-grandnephew of Caleb Tompkins; second great-grandson of Jonathan Griffin Tompkins; third great-grandnephew of Robert Gilbert Livingston; fourth great-grandson of Gilbert Livingston; fourth great-grandnephew of John Livingston and Robert Livingston (1688-1775); fifth great-grandson of Robert Livingston the Elder; fifth great-grandnephew of Pieter Schuyler and Johannes Schuyler (1668-1747); first cousin twice removed of Jacob Livingston Sutherland; first cousin four times removed of Philip Van Cortlandt and Pierre Van Cortlandt Jr.; first cousin five times removed of Robert Livingston (1708-1790), Peter Van Brugh Livingston, Philip Livingston, Robert R. Livingston (1718-1775) and William Livingston; first cousin six times removed of Robert Livingston the Younger and Johannes Schuyler (1697-1746); first cousin seven times removed of David Davidse Schuyler and Myndert Davidtse Schuyler; second cousin thrice removed of Enos Thompson Throop, George Bliss Throop, Hamilton Fish and Israel Thompson Hatch; second cousin four times removed of Peter Robert Livingston, Walter Livingston, Philip Peter Livingston, Robert R. Livingston (1746-1813), Henry Brockholst Livingston and Edward Livingston; second cousin five times removed of Stephanus Bayard, Pierre Van Cortlandt, Philip John Schuyler, Philip P. Schuyler and Stephen John Schuyler; third cousin twice removed of Israel Dodd Condit, Nicholas Fish and Hamilton Fish Jr. (1849-1936); third cousin thrice removed of Stephen Van Rensselaer, Philip Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Henry Walter Livingston, Peter Augustus Jay, Rensselaer Westerlo, Edward Philip Livingston, William Alexander Duer, John Duer, William Jay and Charles Ludlow Livingston; fourth cousin once removed of Jonathan Mayhew Wainwright and Hamilton Fish Jr. (1888-1991).
  Political families: Livingston-Schuyler family of New York; Roosevelt family of New York (subsets of the Four Thousand Related Politicians).
  See also Wikipedia article — Find-A-Grave memorial
  Elias Mulford Condit (1841-1932) — also known as Elias M. Condit — of West Orange, Essex County, N.J. Born in Orange, Essex County, N.J., May 22, 1841. Republican. Surveyor; real estate business; member of New Jersey state house of assembly from Essex County, 1886-87; candidate for U.S. Representative from New Jersey, 1890; delegate to Republican National Convention from New Jersey, 1892. Died in West Orange, Essex County, N.J., March 13, 1932 (age 90 years, 296 days). Burial location unknown.
  Relatives: Son of Ira Harrison Condit and Phebe Farrand (Mulford) Condit; married, November 29, 1870, to Sarah Louise Beach; great-grandson of Aaron Kitchell; first cousin twice removed of John Condit; first cousin thrice removed of Silas Condict; second cousin of Albert Pierson Condit; second cousin once removed of Silas Condit; second cousin twice removed of Lewis Condict; second cousin four times removed of Abraham Davenport; third cousin of Amzi Condit; third cousin once removed of Israel Dodd Condit, Simeon Harrison and Alfred Henry Condict; third cousin thrice removed of John Davenport and James Davenport; fourth cousin of Augustus William Cutler and Fillmore Condit; fourth cousin once removed of Simeon Harrison Rollinson.
  Political families: Kellogg-Adams-Seymour-Chapin family of Connecticut and New York; Eastman family; Condit family of Orange, New Jersey (subsets of the Four Thousand Related Politicians).
  George Ezra DeCamp (1843-1926) — also known as George E. DeCamp — of Livingston, Essex County, N.J. Born in Livingston, Essex County, N.J., May 15, 1843. Republican. Justice of the peace; delegate to Republican National Convention from New Jersey, 1900. Died in Roseland, Essex County, N.J., October 11, 1926 (age 83 years, 149 days). Interment at Prospect Hill Cemetery, Caldwell, N.J.
  Relatives: Son of Aaron DeCamp and Mary E. (Tompkins) DeCamp; married, November 17, 1867, to Matilda Harrison; third cousin once removed of Israel Dodd Condit; third cousin thrice removed of William Henry Rossell; fourth cousin once removed of Jeremiah M. DeCamp.
  Political families: Pike family of Lubec, Maine; Condit family of Orange, New Jersey; Livingston-Schuyler family of New York; Edwards-Davenport-Thompson-Hooker family of Connecticut; DeCamp-Hinchman family of New Jersey; Thompson-Sutherland family of New York (subsets of the Four Thousand Related Politicians).
  Alanson B. Treat (1847-1917) — of Adrian, Lenawee County, Mich. Born in Adrian, Lenawee County, Mich., January 20, 1847. Druggist; mayor of Adrian, Mich., 1892-93; justice of the peace. Died in 1917 (age about 70 years). Interment at North Adrian Cemetery, Adrian, Mich.
  Relatives: Son of Butler Treat and Nancy (Tingley) Treat; half-brother of David Leroy Treat; married 1871 to Clara M. Lincoln; fourth great-grandson of Robert Treat; second cousin thrice removed of Robert Treat Paine; fourth cousin once removed of John Condit and Aurelius Buckingham.
  Political families: Condit family of Orange, New Jersey; Kellogg-Adams-Seymour-Chapin family of Connecticut and New York (subsets of the Four Thousand Related Politicians).
  See also Find-A-Grave memorial
  Frank M. Brundage (1851-1920) — of Conyngham, Luzerne County, Pa. Born in Conyngham, Luzerne County, Pa., August 18, 1851. Republican. Physician; U.S. Consul in Aix-la-Chapelle, 1897-1905. Died, from arteriosclerosis and nephritis, in Scranton, Lackawanna County, Pa., February 22, 1920 (age 68 years, 188 days). Interment at Conyngham Episcopal Cemetery, Conyngham, Pa.
  Relatives: Son of Charles Brundage and Catherina (Andreas) Brundage; married, June 10, 1862, to Mary Ann Reinhart; married, November 19, 1874, to Ella Minerva Young; second cousin twice removed of Perry Amherst Carpenter; fourth cousin once removed of John Randolph Wilder and Ernest I. Hatfield.
  Political families: Condit family of Orange, New Jersey; Kellogg-Adams-Seymour-Chapin family of Connecticut and New York; Hatfield-Brundage-Carpenter-Wilder family of New York (subsets of the Four Thousand Related Politicians).
  See also Find-A-Grave memorial
  Charles M. Hotchkiss (1853-1927) — of Cheshire, New Haven County, Conn. Born in Connecticut, February, 1853. Republican. Farmer; lumber business; member of Connecticut state house of representatives from Cheshire; elected 1906. Died in Cheshire, New Haven County, Conn., July 4, 1927 (age 74 years, 0 days). Interment at Hillside Cemetery, Cheshire, Conn.
  Relatives: Son of Merriman Lambert Hotchkiss and Eliza Jeannette (Benham) Hotchkiss; fourth great-grandson of Robert Treat; second cousin once removed of Elisha Hotchkiss Jr. and James Rood Doolittle; second cousin thrice removed of Robert Treat Paine and Jonathan Brace; third cousin once removed of Aurelius Buckingham; third cousin twice removed of Luther Hotchkiss, James Doolittle Wooster and Thomas Kimberly Brace; third cousin thrice removed of Matthew Griswold, John Alsop, Philip Frisbee, Return Jonathan Meigs, Sr. and Josiah Meigs; fourth cousin of Philo Beecher Buckingham, William Judson Clark and Charles Hull Clark; fourth cousin once removed of John Condit, Elisha Hotchkiss, Thomas Hale Sill, Levi Yale, John Calhoun Lewis, Henry Gould Lewis, Robert Cleveland Usher and John Holbrook Chapman.
  Political families: Conger family of New York; King-Hazard family of Connecticut and New York; Wildman family of Danbury, Connecticut; Kellogg-Adams-Seymour-Chapin family of Connecticut and New York; Saltonstall-Davis-Frelinghuysen-Appleton family of Massachusetts (subsets of the Four Thousand Related Politicians).
George Eastman George Eastman (1854-1932) — of Rochester, Monroe County, N.Y. Born in Waterville, Oneida County, N.Y., July 12, 1854. Republican. Inventor; founder, Eastman Kodak Company; philanthropist; candidate for Presidential Elector for New York; alternate delegate to Republican National Convention from New York, 1928. English ancestry. Died from a self-inflicted gunshot, in Rochester, Monroe County, N.Y., March 14, 1932 (age 77 years, 246 days). His suicide note was just six words: "My work is done. Why wait?". Interment at Kodak Park, Rochester, N.Y.
  Relatives: Son of George Washington Eastman and Maria (Kilbourn) Eastman; first cousin of Harvey Gridley Eastman; third cousin of Frederick Walker Pitkin; third cousin twice removed of James Kilbourne and Daniel Kellogg (1791-1875); fourth cousin once removed of Silas Condict, Byron H. Kilbourn, Harrison Blodget, George Bradley Kellogg, Daniel Kellogg (1835-1918), Clarence Horatio Pitkin, Carroll Peabody Pitkin, Caleb Seymour Pitkin and Eldred C. Pitkin.
  Political families: Kellogg-Adams-Seymour-Chapin family of Connecticut and New York; Eastman family (subsets of the Four Thousand Related Politicians).
  The World War II Liberty ship SS George Eastman (built 1943 at Richmond, California; scrapped 1977) was named for him.
  See also Wikipedia article — NNDB dossier — Find-A-Grave memorial
  Books about George Eastman: Carl W. Ackerman, George Eastman: Founder of Kodak and the Photography Business — Elizabeth Brayer, George Eastman: A Biography — Lynda Pflueger, George Eastman: Bringing Photography to the People (for young readers)
  Image source: Time Magazine, March 31, 1924
Jacob Clark Pike Jacob Clark Pike (1854-1928) — also known as Jacob C. Pike — of Lubec, Washington County, Maine. Born in Maine, January 11, 1854. Sea captain; sardine business; member of Maine state house of representatives, 1901-03; U.S. Collector of Customs, 1907-13. Died in 1928 (age about 74 years). Burial location unknown.
  Relatives: Son of Dianna (Clark) Pike and Jabez Marston Pike; married, November 12, 1890, to Mary Susan Tucker; father of Sumner Tucker Pike and Moses Bernard Pike; uncle of Doris Pike and Frank Avery Pike; third cousin once removed of Caleb Cushing, James Shepard Pike and Frederick Augustus Pike; third cousin twice removed of Smith Thompson; fourth cousin once removed of Jacob Livingston Sutherland, Gilbert Livingston Thompson and Israel Dodd Condit.
  Political families: Pike family of Lubec, Maine; Sargent-Davis-Pike-Flanders family of New Hampshire (subsets of the Four Thousand Related Politicians).
  Image source: Lubec Historical Society
  Fillmore Condit (1855-1939) — of Verona, Essex County, N.J.; Santa Paula, Ventura County, Calif.; Essex Fells, Essex County, N.J.; Long Beach, Los Angeles County, Calif. Born in Roseland, Essex County, N.J., September 5, 1855. Grocer; invented and manufactured the Condit refrigerator door fastener; Essex County Freeholder; real estate business; New York representative for Union Oil Company of California; founder, Long Beach Community Hospital 1924; mayor of Long Beach, Calif., 1926-27. Methodist. Member, Anti-Saloon League. Died in Long Beach, Los Angeles County, Calif., January 6, 1939 (age 83 years, 123 days). Cremated; ashes interred at Prospect Hill Cemetery, Caldwell, N.J.
  Relatives: Son of Stephen J. Condit and Catherine Jane (Tappan) Condit; married 1881 to Ida Frances Rafter; first cousin thrice removed of Silas Condict; second cousin once removed of Alfred Henry Condict; second cousin twice removed of John Condit and Lewis Condict; third cousin once removed of Silas Condit and Israel Dodd Condit; fourth cousin of Augustus William Cutler, Albert Pierson Condit, Amzi Condit and Elias Mulford Condit; fourth cousin once removed of Simeon Harrison.
  Political families: Kellogg-Adams-Seymour-Chapin family of Connecticut and New York; Eastman family; Condit family of Orange, New Jersey (subsets of the Four Thousand Related Politicians).
  See also Find-A-Grave memorial
  Wallace Bruce Crumb (1858-1938) — also known as Wallace B. Crumb — of Forestville, Bristol, Hartford County, Conn. Born in Stonington, New London County, Conn., January 22, 1858. Democrat. Merchant; manufacturer; member of Connecticut state house of representatives from Bristol, 1919-20; defeated, 1920, 1922. Died September 21, 1938 (age 80 years, 242 days). Interment at Forestville Cemetery, Forestville, Bristol, Conn.
  Relatives: Son of George W. Crumb and Ellen (Chapman) Crumb; married to Edith Ardell Farmer; father of Wallace Raymond Crumb; second cousin thrice removed of Augustus George Hazard; third cousin thrice removed of John Condit; fourth cousin of Walter Thomas Bliss; fourth cousin once removed of Chester Merton Bliss and George Walter Bliss.
  Political families: Kellogg-Adams-Seymour-Chapin family of Connecticut and New York; Condit family of Orange, New Jersey (subsets of the Four Thousand Related Politicians).
  See also Find-A-Grave memorial
  Mary Mather Hooker (1864-1939) — also known as Mary M. Hooker; Mary Mather Turner — of Hartford, Hartford County, Conn. Born in Philadelphia, Philadelphia County, Pa., February 26, 1864. Republican. Member of Connecticut state house of representatives from Hartford, 1921-22, 1925-26; candidate for Presidential Elector for Connecticut. Female. Member, Colonial Dames; Daughters of the American Revolution; Order of the Eastern Star. First woman to serve in the Connecticut legislature. Died, in Hartford Hospital, Hartford, Hartford County, Conn., May 13, 1939 (age 75 years, 76 days). Entombed at Cedar Hill Cemetery, Hartford, Conn.
  Relatives: Daughter of Charles Peaslee Turner and Julia Francis (Mather) Turner; married, November 12, 1889, to Edward Williams Hooker; second cousin thrice removed of Smith Thompson; third cousin twice removed of Jacob Livingston Sutherland, Gilbert Livingston Thompson and Israel Dodd Condit.
  Political families: Pike family of Lubec, Maine; Condit family of Orange, New Jersey; Livingston-Schuyler family of New York; Edwards-Davenport-Thompson-Hooker family of Connecticut; DeCamp-Hinchman family of New Jersey; Thompson-Sutherland family of New York (subsets of the Four Thousand Related Politicians).
  See also Find-A-Grave memorial
Simeon H. Rollinson Simeon Harrison Rollinson (1870-1935) — also known as Simeon H. Rollinson — of West Orange, Essex County, N.J. Born in West Orange, Essex County, N.J., December 31, 1870. Democrat. Lawyer; banker; candidate for New Jersey state house of assembly, 1898; mayor of West Orange, N.J., 1922-34. Episcopalian. Member, Freemasons. Died in West Orange, Essex County, N.J., February 13, 1935 (age 64 years, 44 days). Interment at Rosedale Cemetery, Orange, N.J.
  Relatives: Son of Samuel Osborn Rollinson and Abbe Maria (Harrison) Rollinson; married, June 4, 1904, to Ruth Magne Small; grandson of Simeon Harrison; sixth great-grandson of Robert Treat; second cousin thrice removed of John Condit; second cousin four times removed of Silas Condict; second cousin five times removed of Robert Treat Paine; third cousin twice removed of Silas Condit; third cousin thrice removed of Lewis Condict and Henry Waggaman Edwards; fourth cousin once removed of Albert Pierson Condit, Elias Mulford Condit and Perry Amherst Carpenter.
  Political families: Kellogg-Adams-Seymour-Chapin family of Connecticut and New York; Eastman family; Condit family of Orange, New Jersey (subsets of the Four Thousand Related Politicians).
  See also Find-A-Grave memorial
  Image source: New York Times, February 14, 1935
  David Leroy Treat (1873-1956) — also known as David L. Treat — of Adrian, Lenawee County, Mich.; Flint, Genesee County, Mich. Born in Michigan, October 26, 1873. Democrat. Physician; mayor of Adrian, Mich.; elected 1904, 1910; member of Michigan Democratic State Central Committee, 1907; delegate to Democratic National Convention from Michigan, 1912. Died in 1956 (age about 82 years). Interment at Oakwood Cemetery, Adrian, Mich.
  Relatives: Son of Butler Treat and Maryette (Vedder) Treat; half-brother of Alanson B. Treat; fourth great-grandson of Robert Treat; second cousin thrice removed of Robert Treat Paine; fourth cousin once removed of John Condit and Aurelius Buckingham.
  Political families: Kellogg-Adams-Seymour-Chapin family of Connecticut and New York; Condit family of Orange, New Jersey (subsets of the Four Thousand Related Politicians).
  See also Find-A-Grave memorial
  Perry Amherst Carpenter (1881-1957) — also known as Perry A. Carpenter — of Lima, Livingston County, N.Y.; Rochester, Monroe County, N.Y.; Irondequoit, Monroe County, N.Y. Born in Benton Township, Lackawanna County, Pa., November 29, 1881. Professor of mathematics, Genesee Wesleyan Seminary, Lima, N.Y., 1910; later high school teacher; Prohibition candidate for New York state assembly from Livingston County, 1909; Prohibition candidate for U.S. Representative from New York 39th District, 1912. Co-author of mathematics and algebra textbooks. Died in Rochester, Monroe County, N.Y., 1957 (age about 75 years). Burial location unknown.
  Relatives: Son of Thomas Carpenter and Sarah Annie (Sweet) Carpenter; married to Maude Bonney and Stella Rourke; seventh great-grandson of Robert Treat; second cousin twice removed of Frank M. Brundage; second cousin four times removed of John Condit; third cousin thrice removed of Silas Condit; fourth cousin once removed of Simeon Harrison Rollinson.
  Political families: Condit family of Orange, New Jersey; Kellogg-Adams-Seymour-Chapin family of Connecticut and New York (subsets of the Four Thousand Related Politicians).
  See also OurCampaigns candidate detail
"Enjoy the hospitable entertainment of a political graveyard."
Henry L. Clinton, Apollo Hall, New York City, February 3, 1872
The Political Graveyard

The Political Graveyard is a web site about U.S. political history and cemeteries. Founded in 1996, it is the Internet's most comprehensive free source for American political biography, listing 320,919 politicians, living and dead.
 
  The coverage of this site includes (1) the President, Vice President, members of Congress, elected state and territorial officeholders in all fifty states, the District of Columbia, and U.S. territories; and the chief elected official, typically the mayor, of qualifying municipalities; (2) candidates at election, including primaries, for any of the above; (3) all federal judges and all state appellate judges; (4) certain federal officials, including the federal cabinet, diplomatic chiefs of mission, consuls, U.S. district attorneys, collectors of customs and internal revenue, members of major federal commissions; and political appointee (pre-1969) postmasters of qualifying communities; (5) state and national political party officials, including delegates, alternate delegates, and other participants in national party nominating conventions; (6) Americans who served as "honorary" consuls for other nations before 1950. Note: municipalities or communities "qualify", for Political Graveyard purposes, if they have at least half a million person-years of history, inclusive of predecessor, successor, and merged entities.  
  The listings are incomplete; development of the database is a continually ongoing project.  
  Information on this page — and on all other pages of this site — is believed to be accurate, but is not guaranteed. Users are advised to check with other sources before relying on any information here.  
  The official URL for this page is: https://politicalgraveyard.com/families/10001-0142.html.  
  Links to this or any other Political Graveyard page are welcome, but specific page addresses may sometimes change as the site develops.  
  If you are searching for a specific named individual, try the alphabetical index of politicians.  
Copyright notices: (1) Facts are not subject to copyright; see Feist v. Rural Telephone. (2) Politician portraits displayed on this site are 70-pixel-wide monochrome thumbnail images, which I believe to constitute fair use under applicable copyright law. Where possible, each image is linked to its online source. However, requests from owners of copyrighted images to delete them from this site are honored. (3) Original material, programming, selection and arrangement are © 1996-2023 Lawrence Kestenbaum. (4) This work is also licensed for free non-commercial re-use, with attribution, under a Creative Commons License.
Site information: The Political Graveyard is created and maintained by Lawrence Kestenbaum, who is solely responsible for its structure and content. — The mailing address is The Political Graveyard, P.O. Box 2563, Ann Arbor MI 48106. — This site is hosted by HDL. — The Political Graveyard opened on July 1, 1996; the last full revision was done on March 8, 2023.

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