Note: This is just one of
1,162
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 Three 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.
|
John Tyler (1747-1813) —
of Charles
City County, Va.
Born in James City
County, Va., February
28, 1747.
Lawyer;
planter;
delegate
to Virginia convention to ratify U.S. constitution from Charles
City County, 1788; Governor of
Virginia, 1808-11.
Died in Charles
City County, Va., January
6, 1813 (age 65 years, 313
days).
Interment a private or family graveyard, Charles City County, Va.
|
|
George Madison (1763-1816) —
of Kentucky.
Born in Augusta County (part now in Rockingham
County), Va., June, 1763.
Served in the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War; Kentucky
auditor of public accounts, 1796-1816; major in the U.S. Army
during the War of 1812; Governor of
Kentucky, 1816; died in office 1816.
Died of tuberculosis,
in Paris, Bourbon
County, Ky., October
14, 1816 (age 53 years, 0
days).
Interment at Frankfort
Cemetery, Frankfort, Ky.
| |
Relatives: Son
of John Madison (1724-1783) and Agatha (Strother) Madison
(1728-1822); married, February
11, 1796, to Jane Smith (1777-1811); first cousin once removed of
James
Madison and William
Taylor Madison; first cousin thrice removed of Henry
Gaines Johnson and James
Francis Buckner; second cousin once removed of John
Walker, John
Tyler (1747-1813), Francis
Walker, Clement
F. Dorsey and Zachary
Taylor; second cousin twice removed of Andrew
Dorsey, John
Strother Pendleton, Albert
Gallatin Pendleton and Aylett
Hawes Buckner; second cousin thrice removed of David
Shelby Walker and Alexander
Warfield Dorsey; second cousin four times removed of James
David Walker, David
Shelby Walker Jr., Eli
Huston Brown Jr., Sidney
Fletcher Taliaferro and Max
Rogers Strother (1908-1982); second cousin five times removed of
Albin
Owings Jr. and Eli
Huston Brown III; third cousin of Robert
Brooke, Meriwether
Lewis, Richard
Aylett Buckner and John
Tyler (1790-1862); third cousin once removed of Francis
Taliaferro Helm, Thomas
Walker Gilmer, Aylette
Buckner, David
Gardiner Tyler and Lyon
Gardiner Tyler; third cousin twice removed of Charles
John Helm and Hubbard
Dozier Helm; third cousin thrice removed of Hubbard
T. Smith, Key
Pittman, Vail
Montgomery Pittman and Bronson
Murray Cutting. |
| | Political families: Walker-Meriwether-Kellogg
family of Virginia; Tyler
family of Virginia; Pendleton-Lee
family of Maryland (subsets of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | See also National
Governors Association biography — Wikipedia
article — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Jonas Mapes (1768-1824) —
of New York, New York
County, N.Y.
Born in Southold, Suffolk
County, Long Island, N.Y., September
6, 1768.
Merchant
tailor; member of New York
state assembly from New York County, 1810-11; general in the U.S.
Army during the War of 1812.
Died in 1824
(age about
55 years).
Burial
location unknown.
|
|
Zachary Taylor (1784-1850) —
also known as "Old Rough and Ready" —
Born in Orange
County, Va., November
24, 1784.
Whig. Major in the U.S. Army during the War of 1812; colonel in the
U.S. Army during the Black Hawk War; general in the U.S. Army during
the Mexican War; President
of the United States, 1849-50; died in office 1850.
Episcopalian.
Slaveowner.
Died, probably of gastroenteritis,
in the White
House, Washington,
D.C., July 9,
1850 (age 65 years, 227
days). Based on the theory that he was poisoned, his remains
were tested for arsenic in 1991; the results tended to disconfirm the
theory.
Original interment at Congressional
Cemetery, Washington, D.C.; reinterment in private or family
graveyard; reinterment in 1926 at Zachary
Taylor National Cemetery, Louisville, Ky.
| |
Relatives: Son
of Richard Taylor (1744-1829) and Sarah Dabney (Strother) Taylor
(1760-1822); married, June 21,
1810, to Margaret
Mackall Smith (niece of Benjamin
Mackall IV and Thomas
Mackall); father of Sarah Knox Taylor (1814-1835; who married Jefferson
Finis Davis); granduncle of Edmund
Haynes Taylor Jr.; ancestor *** of Victor
D. Crist (born1957); first cousin twice removed of Edmund
Pendleton; first cousin thrice removed of Elliot
Woolfolk Major and Edgar
Bailey Woolfolk; second cousin of James
Madison and William
Taylor Madison; second cousin once removed of Richard
Henry Lee, Francis
Lightfoot Lee, Arthur
Lee, John
Penn, John
Pendleton Jr., Nathaniel
Pendleton, George
Madison, Coleby
Chew, John
Strother Pendleton, Albert
Gallatin Pendleton, Aylett
Hawes Buckner and Thomas
Leonidas Crittenden; second cousin twice removed of John
Walker, John
Tyler (1747-1813) and Francis
Walker; second cousin thrice removed of George
Cassety Pendleton, Hubbard
T. Smith, Charles
M. Pendleton, Sidney
Fletcher Taliaferro, Daniel
Micajah Pendleton and Max
Rogers Strother; second cousin four times removed of Charles
Sumner Pendleton; third cousin of Thomas
Sim Lee, Henry
Lee, Charles
Lee, Richard
Bland Lee, Edmund
Jennings Lee, Philip
Clayton Pendleton, Edmund
Henry Pendleton and Nathanael
Greene Pendleton; third cousin once removed of Robert
Brooke, Meriwether
Lewis, Richard
Aylett Buckner, Henry
Gaines Johnson, John
Lee, John
Tyler (1790-1862), Philip
Coleman Pendleton, George
Hunt Pendleton and Joseph
Henry Pendleton; third cousin twice removed of Hancock
Lee Jackson, Fitzhugh
Lee, William
Barret Pendleton, James
Francis Buckner, Francis
Key Pendleton, Charles
Rittenhouse Pendleton, John
Overton Pendleton and Francis
Preston Blair Lee; third cousin thrice removed of Abraham
Lincoln, John
Lee Carroll, Charles
Kellogg, James
Sansome Lakin and Edward
Brooke Lee; fourth cousin of Francis
Taliaferro Helm, Thomas
Walker Gilmer, Aylette
Buckner, David
Gardiner Tyler and Lyon
Gardiner Tyler; fourth cousin once removed of Charles
Willing Byrd, Charles
John Helm and Hubbard
Dozier Helm. |
| | Political family: Pendleton-Lee
family of Maryland (subset of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | Cross-reference: David
R. Atchison — Thomas
Ewing |
| | Taylor counties in Fla., Ga., Iowa and Ky. are
named for him. |
| | Other politicians named for him: Zachary
T. Coy
— Zachary
T. Bielby
— Zachary
T. Harris
|
| | Campaign slogan (1848): "General Taylor
never surrenders." |
| | See also Wikipedia
article — NNDB
dossier — Find-A-Grave
memorial — OurCampaigns
candidate detail |
| | Books about Zachary Taylor: K. Jack
Bauer, Zachary
Taylor: Soldier, Planter, Statesman of the Old
Southwest — Elbert B. Smith, The
Presidencies of Zachary Taylor and Millard
Fillmore |
| | Image source: Portrait & Biographical
Album of Washtenaw County (1891) |
|
|
David Gardiner (1784-1844) —
of New York.
Born in East Hampton, Suffolk
County, Long Island, N.Y., May 29,
1784.
Member of New York
state senate 1st District, 1824-27.
Among those killed in the explosion
when a cannon
accidentally
burst on
board the U.S.S. Princeton, on the Potomac River near Fort
Washington, Prince
George's County, Md., February
28, 1844 (age 59 years, 275
days).
Originally entombed at Congressional
Cemetery, Washington, D.C.; later interred at South
End Cemetery, East Hampton, Long Island, N.Y.
|
|
John Tyler (1790-1862) —
also known as "The Accidental
President" —
of Williamsburg,
Va.
Born in Charles
City County, Va., March
29, 1790.
Whig. Lawyer;
member of Virginia
state house of delegates, 1811-16, 1823-25, 1839-40; served in
the U.S. Army during the War of 1812; U.S.
Representative from Virginia 23rd District, 1817-21; Governor of
Virginia, 1825-27; U.S.
Senator from Virginia, 1827-36; delegate
to Virginia state constitutional convention, 1829-30; delegate to
Whig National Convention from Virginia, 1839 (Convention
Vice-President); Vice
President of the United States, 1841; defeated, 1836; President
of the United States, 1841-45; delegate
to Virginia secession convention, 1861; Delegate
from Virginia to the Confederate Provisional Congress, 1861-62;
died in office 1862.
Episcopalian.
English
ancestry.
A bill to impeach
him was defeated in the House of Representatives in January 1843.
Slaveowner.
Died, probably from a stroke,
in a hotel
room at Richmond,
Va., January
18, 1862 (age 71 years, 295
days).
Interment at Hollywood
Cemetery, Richmond, Va.
| |
Relatives: Son
of John
Tyler and Mary (Armistead) Tyler (1761-1797); married, March
29, 1813, to Letitia
Tyler; married, June 26,
1844, to Julia
Tyler (daughter of David
Gardiner (1784-1844)); father of David
Gardiner Tyler and Lyon
Gardiner Tyler; third cousin of George
Madison; third cousin once removed of Zachary
Taylor; third cousin twice removed of John
Strother Pendleton, Albert
Gallatin Pendleton and Aylett
Hawes Buckner; third cousin thrice removed of James
Francis Buckner and Bronson
Murray Cutting. |
| | Political families: Saltonstall-Davis-Frelinghuysen-Appleton
family of Massachusetts; Mapes-Jennings-Denby-Harrison
family of New York and Arizona; Tyler
family of Virginia (subsets of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | Cross-reference: Benjamin
Tappan |
| | Tyler County,
Tex. is named for him. |
| | John Tyler High
School, in Tyler,
Texas, is named for
him. — John Tyler Community
College, in Chester,
Virginia, is named for
him. |
| | Other politicians named for him: John
T. Rich
— John
T. Cutting
— John
Tyler Cooper
— John
Tyler Hammons
|
| | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — National Governors
Association biography — Wikipedia
article — NNDB
dossier — Find-A-Grave
memorial — OurCampaigns
candidate detail |
| | Books about John Tyler: Oliver P.
Chitwood, John
Tyler : Champion of the Old South — Norma Lois
Peterson, Presidencies
of William Henry Harrison and John Tyler — Jane C.
Walker, John
Tyler : A President of Many Firsts — Edward P. Crapol,
John
Tyler, the Accidental President — Gary May, John
Tyler: The 10th President, 1841-1845 — Donald Barr
Chidsey, And
Tyler Too |
| | Image source: Portrait & Biographical
Album of Washtenaw County (1891) |
|
|
Letitia Tyler (1790-1842) —
also known as Letitia Christian —
Born in New Kent
County, Va., November
12, 1790.
Second
Lady of the United States, 1841; First Lady
of the United States, 1841-42; died in office 1842.
Female.
Died, following a stroke,
in the White
House, Washington,
D.C., September
10, 1842 (age 51 years, 302
days).
Interment a private or family graveyard, New Kent County, Va.
|
|
David Parshall Mapes (1798-1890) —
also known as David P. Mapes —
of Roxbury, Delaware
County, N.Y.; Ripon, Fond du
Lac County, Wis.
Born in Coxsackie, Greene
County, N.Y., January
10, 1798.
Steamboat
business; member of New York
state assembly from Delaware County, 1831; merchant;
Presidential Elector for Wisconsin, 1848.
Principal founder
of Ripon College, 1850.
Died in Fond du Lac, Fond du Lac
County, Wis., May 18,
1890 (age 92 years, 128
days).
Interment at Hillside Cemetery, Ripon, Wis.
| |
Relatives: Son
of Timothy Mapes and Hannah (Brown) Mapes; married, April
14, 1822, to Ruth Frisbee (1804-1854); married, January
26, 1855, to Mary C. Frisbee (1827-1863); married, November
9, 1864, to Emeline (Huntsinger) Wilson (1827-1882); married, September
15, 1883, to Augusta R. Miles (1837-1911); father of Fannie
Mapes (1867-1926) (who married Otto
Christian Neuman); first cousin once removed of Jonas
Mapes; third cousin once removed of George
Hammond Parshall; third cousin thrice removed of Irving
Anthony Jennings and Renz
L. Jennings; fourth cousin once removed of David
Gardiner and Bertha
Mapes. |
| | Mapes Hall (built 1959), at Ripon College,
Ripon,
Wisconsin, is named for
him. |
| | Epitaph: "In grateful recognition of
David P, Mapes, for his vision and valuable services as pioneer,
founder, benefactor and promoter of the City of Ripon and its
College, the citizens of Ripon dedicate this marker." |
| | See also Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
John Strother Pendleton (1802-1868) —
also known as John S. Pendleton; "The Lone
Star" —
of Culpeper, Culpeper
County, Va.
Born near Culpeper, Culpeper
County, Va., March 1,
1802.
Lawyer;
member of Virginia
state house of delegates, 1830-33, 1836-39; U.S. Charge
d'Affaires to Chile, 1842-44; Argentina, 1851-54; U.S.
Representative from Virginia 9th District, 1845-49.
Slaveowner.
Died near Culpeper, Culpeper
County, Va., November
19, 1868 (age 66 years, 263
days).
Interment a
private or family graveyard, Culpeper County, Va.
| |
Relatives: Son
of William Pendleton (1779-1824) and Nancy (Strother) Pendleton
(1784-1819); brother of Albert
Gallatin Pendleton; married, December
2, 1824, to Lucy Ann Williams (1805-1872); granduncle of Sidney
Fletcher Taliaferro; great-grandnephew of Edmund
Pendleton; first cousin of Aylett
Hawes Buckner; first cousin twice removed of John
Pendleton Jr. and Nathaniel
Pendleton; first cousin thrice removed of William
Grayson; second cousin of Philip
Coleman Pendleton; second cousin once removed of Philip
Clayton Pendleton, Zachary
Taylor, Edmund
Henry Pendleton, Nathanael
Greene Pendleton and Charles
Rittenhouse Pendleton; second cousin twice removed of John
Penn, James
Madison, William
Taylor Madison, George
Madison, Alfred
William Grayson and Beverly
Robinson Grayson; second cousin thrice removed of John
Walker, John
Tyler (1747-1813) and Francis
Walker; third cousin of Henry
Gaines Johnson, George
Hunt Pendleton and Joseph
Henry Pendleton; third cousin once removed of William
Barret Pendleton, Francis
Key Pendleton and John
Overton Pendleton; third cousin twice removed of Robert
Brooke, Meriwether
Lewis, Richard
Aylett Buckner, John
Tyler (1790-1862) and Max
Rogers Strother; fourth cousin of Coleby
Chew; fourth cousin once removed of Gabriel
Slaughter, Francis
Taliaferro Helm, Thomas
Walker Gilmer, Aylette
Buckner, George
Cassety Pendleton, James
Benjamin Garnett (1845-1921), David
Gardiner Tyler, James
Francis Buckner, Lyon
Gardiner Tyler, Hubbard
T. Smith, Carter
Henry Harrison II, Charles
M. Pendleton, John
Brady Grayson and Daniel
Micajah Pendleton. |
| | Political family: Pendleton-Lee
family of Maryland (subset of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — U.S. State Dept career summary |
|
|
Albert Gallatin Pendleton (1807-1875) —
also known as Albert G. Pendleton —
of Giles
County, Va.
Born in Culpeper
County, Va., June 28,
1807.
Member of Virginia
state house of delegates from Giles County, 1855-56.
Died in Giles
County, Va., June 19,
1875 (age 67 years, 356
days).
Interment at Chapman Cemetery, Ripplemead, Va.
| |
Relatives: Son
of William Pendleton (1779-1824) and Nancy (Strother) Pendleton
(1784-1819); brother of John
Strother Pendleton; married to Elvina Chapman (1811-1868);
grandfather of Sidney
Fletcher Taliaferro; great-grandnephew of Edmund
Pendleton; first cousin of Aylett
Hawes Buckner; first cousin twice removed of John
Pendleton Jr. and Nathaniel
Pendleton; first cousin thrice removed of William
Grayson; second cousin of Philip
Coleman Pendleton; second cousin once removed of Philip
Clayton Pendleton, Zachary
Taylor, Edmund
Henry Pendleton, Nathanael
Greene Pendleton and Charles
Rittenhouse Pendleton; second cousin twice removed of John
Penn, James
Madison, William
Taylor Madison, George
Madison, Alfred
William Grayson and Beverly
Robinson Grayson; second cousin thrice removed of John
Walker, John
Tyler (1747-1813) and Francis
Walker; third cousin of Henry
Gaines Johnson, George
Hunt Pendleton and Joseph
Henry Pendleton; third cousin once removed of William
Barret Pendleton, Francis
Key Pendleton and John
Overton Pendleton; third cousin twice removed of Robert
Brooke, Meriwether
Lewis, Richard
Aylett Buckner, John
Tyler (1790-1862) and Max
Rogers Strother; fourth cousin of Coleby
Chew; fourth cousin once removed of Gabriel
Slaughter, Francis
Taliaferro Helm, Thomas
Walker Gilmer, Aylette
Buckner, George
Cassety Pendleton, James
Benjamin Garnett (1845-1921), David
Gardiner Tyler, James
Francis Buckner, Lyon
Gardiner Tyler, Hubbard
T. Smith, Carter
Henry Harrison II, Charles
M. Pendleton, John
Brady Grayson and Daniel
Micajah Pendleton. |
| | Political family: Pendleton-Lee
family of Maryland (subset of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | See also Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Aylett Hawes Buckner (1816-1894) —
also known as Aylett H. Buckner —
of Mexico, Audrain
County, Mo.
Born in Fredericksburg,
Va., December
14, 1816.
Democrat. Circuit judge in Missouri, 1857; U.S.
Representative from Missouri, 1873-85 (13th District 1873-83, 7th
District 1883-85).
Slaveowner.
Died in Mexico, Audrain
County, Mo., February
5, 1894 (age 77 years, 53
days).
Interment at Elmwood
Cemetery, Mexico, Mo.
| |
Relatives: Son
of Bailey Buckner (1789-1832) and Mildred (Strother) Buckner
(1795-1875); married, September
16, 1841, to Eliza L. Clark (1819-1905); grandnephew of Aylett
Hawes; first cousin of John
Strother Pendleton and Albert
Gallatin Pendleton; first cousin once removed of Richard
Hawes and Albert
Gallatin Hawes; first cousin twice removed of Sidney
Fletcher Taliaferro; second cousin once removed of Zachary
Taylor and Harry
Bartow Hawes; second cousin twice removed of John
Walker, George
Madison, Francis
Walker and Richard
Aylett Buckner; second cousin thrice removed of John
Tyler (1747-1813); third cousin once removed of Aylette
Buckner; third cousin twice removed of Robert
Brooke, Meriwether
Lewis, John
Tyler (1790-1862) and Max
Rogers Strother; fourth cousin of Thomas
Walker Gilmer and James
Francis Buckner (1849-1923); fourth cousin once removed of Robert
Pryor Henry, Francis
Taliaferro Helm, John
Flournoy Henry, Gustavus
Adolphus Henry, Thomas
Stanhope Flournoy, David
Gardiner Tyler, Lyon
Gardiner Tyler, Key
Pittman and Vail
Montgomery Pittman. |
| | Political families: Walker-Meriwether-Kellogg
family of Virginia; Blackburn-Slaughter-Buckner-Madison
family of Kentucky; Tyler
family of Virginia; Pendleton-Lee
family of Maryland (subsets of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Julia Tyler (1820-1889) —
also known as Julia Gardiner —
Born in East Hampton, Suffolk
County, Long Island, N.Y., July 29,
1820.
First
Lady of the United States, 1844-45.
Female.
Died, in the Exchange Hotel, Richmond,
Va., July 10,
1889 (age 68 years, 346
days).
Interment at Hollywood
Cemetery, Richmond, Va.
|
|
David Gardiner Tyler (1846-1927) —
also known as D. Gardiner Tyler —
of Sturgeon Point, Charles
City County, Va.
Born in East Hampton, Suffolk
County, Long Island, N.Y., July 12,
1846.
Democrat. Served in the Confederate Army during the Civil War; lawyer;
member of Virginia
state senate, 1891-92, 1900-04; U.S.
Representative from Virginia 2nd District, 1893-97; circuit judge
in Virginia, 1905-27; died in office 1927.
Member, Phi
Kappa Psi.
Died in Charles
City County, Va., September
5, 1927 (age 81 years, 55
days).
Interment at Hollywood
Cemetery, Richmond, Va.
|
|
James Francis Buckner (1849-1923) —
also known as James F. Buckner —
of Louisville, Jefferson
County, Ky.
Born in Hopkinsville, Christian
County, Ky., May 6,
1849.
Republican. Lawyer;
U.S. Collector of Internal Revenue for the 5th Kentucky District,
1879; delegate to Republican National Convention from Kentucky, 1880;
Honorary
Consul for Guatemala in Louisville,
Ky., 1896-99; Consul-General
for Central America in Louisville,
Ky., 1897-98; Consul-General
for Honduras in Louisville,
Ky., 1898-1907; Consul-General
for Nicaragua in Louisville,
Ky., 1899-1907.
Died, from angina
pectoris and cerebral
hemorrhage, in Louisville, Jefferson
County, Ky., September
19, 1923 (age 74 years, 136
days).
Interment at Cave
Hill Cemetery, Louisville, Ky.
|
|
Lyon Gardiner Tyler (1853-1935) —
of Richmond,
Va.
Born in Charles
City County, Va., August
24, 1853.
Member of Virginia
state house of delegates from Richmond city, 1887-88; president,
College of William and Mary, 1888-1919.
Died in Richmond,
Va., February
12, 1935 (age 81 years, 172
days).
Interment at Hollywood
Cemetery, Richmond, Va.
|
|
William Tyler Page (b. 1868) —
of Chevy Chase, Montgomery
County, Md.
Born in Frederick, Frederick
County, Md., October
19, 1868.
Republican. Candidate for U.S.
Representative from Maryland 2nd District, 1902; clerk of the
U.S. House of Representatives, 1919.
Episcopalian.
Interment at Oak
Hill Cemetery, Washington, D.C.
|
|
John Lee Saltonstall (1878-1959) —
also known as John L. Saltonstall —
of Beverly, Essex
County, Mass.
Born in Beverly, Essex
County, Mass., May 23,
1878.
Republican. Delegate to Republican National Convention from
Massachusetts, 1916.
Died in Concord, Middlesex
County, Mass., June 6,
1959 (age 81 years, 14
days).
Burial
location unknown.
| |
Relatives: Son
of William Gurdon Saltonstall (1831-1878) and Josephine Rose (Lee)
Saltonstall (1842-1889); married, December
10, 1910, to Gladys Durant Rice (1886-1984); married, November
1, 1928, to Margaret Auchmuty Tucker (c.1901-1947); father of John
Lee Saltonstall Jr. (1916-2007); uncle of William
Gurdon Saltonstall (1905-1989); grandnephew of Leverett
Saltonstall (1783-1845); second great-grandnephew of George
Cabot; third great-grandnephew of Gurdon
Saltonstall (1666-1724) and Timothy
Pickering; first cousin once removed of Leverett
Saltonstall (1825-1895), Leverett
Saltonstall (1892-1979) and Richard
Saltonstall; first cousin twice removed of William
Lawrence Saltonstall; first cousin four times removed of Gurdon
Saltonstall (1708-1785); second cousin twice removed of John
Forbes Kerry; second cousin thrice removed of Dudley
Leavitt Pickman; second cousin four times removed of John
Wingate Weeks; second cousin five times removed of Joshua
Coit; third cousin once removed of Henry
Cabot Lodge; third cousin thrice removed of David
Gardiner and Henry
Titus Backus; fourth cousin once removed of John
Gardner Coolidge, Augustus
Peabody Gardner, Henry
Cabot Lodge Jr., John
Davis Lodge and Archibald
Cox. |
| | Political families: Saltonstall-Davis-Frelinghuysen-Appleton
family of Massachusetts; Saltonstall-Weeks
family of Massachusetts (subsets of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|
|
Sidney Fletcher Taliaferro (1885-1971) —
also known as Sidney F. Taliaferro —
of Washington,
D.C.
Born in Salem,
Va., March 4,
1885.
Democrat. Lawyer; law
professor; banker; member
District of Columbia board of commissioners, 1926-30; director,
Washington Gas
Light Co. and Georgetown Gas
Light Co.; board member, Columbia Hospital.
Episcopalian.
Member, American Bar
Association; Delta
Chi; Freemasons.
Died in Washington,
D.C., June 21,
1971 (age 86 years, 109
days).
Interment at Rock
Creek Cemetery, Washington, D.C.
| |
Relatives: Son
of Van Tromp Taliaferro (1836-1902) and Sallie (Pendleton) Taliaferro
(1850-1940); married, October
3, 1916, to Elizabeth Kirkwood Fulton (1887-1938); grandson of Albert
Gallatin Pendleton; grandnephew of John
Strother Pendleton; third great-grandnephew of Edmund
Pendleton; first cousin twice removed of Aylett
Hawes Buckner; first cousin four times removed of John
Pendleton Jr. and Nathaniel
Pendleton; first cousin five times removed of William
Grayson; second cousin twice removed of Philip
Coleman Pendleton; second cousin thrice removed of Philip
Clayton Pendleton, Zachary
Taylor, Edmund
Henry Pendleton and Nathanael
Greene Pendleton; second cousin four times removed of John
Penn, James
Madison, William
Taylor Madison, George
Madison, Alfred
William Grayson and Beverly
Robinson Grayson; second cousin five times removed of John
Walker, John
Tyler and Francis
Walker; third cousin once removed of Charles
Rittenhouse Pendleton (1850-1914); third cousin twice removed of
Henry
Gaines Johnson, George
Hunt Pendleton and Joseph
Henry Pendleton; fourth cousin once removed of William
Barret Pendleton, Francis
Key Pendleton and John
Overton Pendleton. |
| | Political family: Pendleton-Lee
family of Maryland (subset of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | See also Find-A-Grave
memorial |
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Bronson Murray Cutting (1888-1935) —
also known as Bronson M. Cutting —
of Santa Fe, Santa Fe
County, N.M.
Born in Oakdale, Suffolk
County, Long Island, N.Y., June 23,
1888.
Republican. Served in the U.S. Army during World War I; U.S.
Senator from New Mexico, 1927-28, 1929-35; died in office 1935;
delegate to Republican National Convention from New Mexico, 1932;
member of Republican
National Committee from New Mexico, 1932.
Episcopalian.
Member, American
Legion.
Killed, along with both pilots and one other passenger, when a
twin-engine Transcontinental and Western air
liner, ran out of fuel in a dense
fog, and crashed near Atlanta, Macon
County, Mo., May 6,
1935 (age 46 years, 317
days). Nine other passengers were injured.
Interment at Green-Wood
Cemetery, Brooklyn, N.Y.
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Relatives: Son
of William Bayard Cutting (1850-1912) and Olivia Peyton (Murray)
Cutting (1855-1949); great-grandnephew of Henry
Walter Livingston; second great-grandson of Walter
Livingston; second great-grandnephew of Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794) and Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792); third great-grandson of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790); third great-grandnephew of Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Philip
Livingston, William
Livingston, Philip
John Schuyler, Philip
P. Schuyler and Stephen
John Schuyler; fourth great-grandson of Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746) and Stephanus
Bayard; fourth great-grandnephew of John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775) and Gilbert
Livingston; fifth great-grandson of Stephanus
Van Cortlandt, Robert
Livingston the Elder, Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724), Pieter
Van Brugh and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); fifth great-grandnephew of Jacobus
Van Cortlandt and Johannes
Cuyler; sixth great-grandson of Nicholas
Bayard (c.1644-1707); seventh great-grandnephew of Pieter
Stuyvesant; first cousin twice removed of Edward
Livingston (1796-1840); first cousin four times removed of Philip
Peter Livingston, Henry
Brockholst Livingston, Peter
Samuel Schuyler and Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler; first cousin five times removed of Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775), Pierre
Van Cortlandt and Nicholas
Bayard (1736-1802); first cousin six times removed of Robert
Livingston the Younger, Cornelis
Cuyler and John
Cruger Jr.; first cousin seven times removed of David
Davidse Schuyler and Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler; second cousin twice removed of Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859); second cousin thrice removed of Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Peter
Augustus Jay, Rensselaer
Westerlo, Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, Philip
Schuyler, James
Alexander Hamilton (1788-1878), William
Jay and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873); second cousin four times removed
of Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), James
Livingston, John
Tyler (1747-1813), Philip
Van Cortlandt, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., Edward
Livingston (1764-1836) and James
Parker; second cousin five times removed of Volkert
Petrus Douw, James
Jay, Henry
Cruger, Hendrick
Kiliaen Van Rensselaer, John
Jay, Frederick
Jay and Killian
Killian Van Rensselaer; third cousin of Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born1870) and John
Eliot Thayer Jr.; third cousin once removed of Brockholst
Livingston; third cousin twice removed of William
Duer, Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer, Denning
Duer and John
Jay II; third cousin thrice removed of George
Madison, Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Maturin
Livingston, John
Tyler (1790-1862), Hamilton
Fish, John
Cortlandt Parker and James
Adams Ekin; fourth cousin of Herbert
Livingston Satterlee; fourth cousin once removed of Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer, Nicholas
Fish, Hamilton
Fish Jr., Robert
Ray Hamilton, John
Kean and Hamilton
Fish Kean. |
| | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; VanRensselaer
family of Albany, New York (subsets of the Three
Thousand Related Politicians). |
| | Politician named for him: Bronson
C. LaFollette
|
| | Epitaph: "Light and understanding and
wisdom was found in him. And the common people heard him
gladly." |
| | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
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Max Rogers Strother (1908-1982) —
also known as Max R. Strother —
of East Lansing, Ingham
County, Mich.; Corpus Christi, Nueces
County, Tex.
Born in Lake Odessa, Ionia
County, Mich., October
3, 1908.
Purchasing
agent; mayor
of East Lansing, Mich., 1953-59.
Died, from a pulmonary
embolus and a ruptured
aortic aneurysm, in Memorial Medical
Center, Corpus Christi, Nueces
County, Tex., December
26, 1982 (age 74 years, 84
days).
Cremated.
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