Note: This is just one of
1,325
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.
 |
Pieter Stuyvesant (c.1612-1672) —
also known as Peter Stuyvesant; "Old Silver
Leg" —
of Nieuw Amsterdam, Niew Neederlandt (now part of Manhattan, New York
County, N.Y.); New York, New York
County, N.Y.
Born in Peperga, Friesland, Netherlands,
about 1612.
Dutch Director-General (colonial governor) of New Netherland,
1647-64.
Frisian
ancestry.
Lost
his right leg in battle in 1644.
Slaveowner.
Died in New York, New York
County, N.Y., 1672 (age
about 60
years).
Entombed at St.
Mark's-in-the-Bowery Churchyard, Manhattan, N.Y.
|
|
Dirck Wesselse Ten Broeck (1638-1717) —
of Albany, Albany
County, N.Y.
Born in Germany,
December
18, 1638.
Mayor
of Albany, N.Y., 1696-98.
Died in Clermont, Columbia
County, N.Y., November
24, 1717 (age 78 years, 341
days).
Burial location unknown.
|
|
Fitz-John Winthrop (1638-1707) —
of New London, New London
County, Conn.
Born in Ipswich, Essex
County, Mass., March
14, 1638.
Colonial
Governor of Connecticut, 1698-1707; died in office 1707.
Died in Boston, Suffolk
County, Mass., November
27, 1707 (age 69 years, 258
days).
Interment at King's
Chapel Burying Ground, Boston, Mass.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of John
Winthrop (1606-1676) and Elizabeth (Reade) Winthrop; married to
Elizabeth Tongue; father of Mary Winthrop (who married John
Livingston); grandson of John
Winthrop (1588-1649); great-granduncle of Thomas
Lindall Winthrop; second great-granduncle of David
Sears and Robert
Charles Winthrop; fifth great-granduncle of Augustus
Peabody Gardner, Charles
Francis Adams, Charles
Archibald Nichols, James
Coats Auchincloss, Gordon
Auchincloss and Hugh
Dudley Auchincloss; sixth great-granduncle of William
Amory Gardner Minot, Hugh
Dudley Auchincloss III, George
Cabot Lodge and John
Forbes Kerry; first cousin four times removed of Martin
Chittenden; first cousin five times removed of Chittenden
Lyon and Alvah
Nash; first cousin six times removed of Israel
Coe; first cousin seven times removed of Lyman
Wetmore Coe, Robert
Cleveland Usher, Arthur
Newton Holden and Allen
Clarence Wilcox. |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Winthrop
#1 family of Boston, Massachusetts; Winthrop
#2 family of Boston, Massachusetts (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also Wikipedia
article — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Stephanus Van Cortlandt (1643-1700) —
of New York, New York
County, N.Y.
Born in Nieuw Amsterdam, Niew Neederlandt (now part of Manhattan, New York
County, N.Y.), May
7, 1643.
Mayor
of New York City, N.Y., 1677-78, 1686-88.
Died in New York, New York
County, N.Y., November
25, 1700 (age
57 years,
202 days).
Burial location unknown.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Olof Stevense van Cortlandt and Annetje 'Anna' (Loockermans) van
Cortlandt; brother of Jacobus
Van Cortlandt; married to Gertrude Schuyler; grandfather of Stephanus
Bayard, Pierre
Van Cortlandt, Philip
John Schuyler and Stephen
John Schuyler; granduncle of James
Jay, John
Jay and Frederick
Jay; great-grandfather of Nicholas
Bayard, Pieter
Schuyler, Philip
Van Cortlandt, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler and James
Parker; great-granduncle of Volkert
Petrus Douw, Philip
P. Schuyler, Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Hendrick
Kiliaen Van Rensselaer, Killian
Killian Van Rensselaer, Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843) and William
Jay; second great-grandfather of Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Henry
Walter Livingston, Philip
Schuyler, James
Alexander Hamilton and John
Cortlandt Parker; second great-granduncle of Leonard
Gansevoort, Leonard
Gansevoort Jr., Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer and John
Jay II; third great-grandfather of Edward
Livingston, Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer, James
Adams Ekin, Richard
Wayne Parker and Charles
Wolcott Parker; third great-granduncle of Peter
Gansevoort; fourth great-grandfather of Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Ray Hamilton and John
Sluyter Wirt; fourth great-granduncle of Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer and Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933); fifth great-grandfather of Charles
Ludlow Livingston, John
Eliot Thayer Jr., Bronson
Murray Cutting, Marietta
Peabody Tree and Endicott
Peabody; sixth great-grandfather of Brockholst
Livingston; sixth great-granduncle of John
Hubner II. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also Wikipedia article |
|
|
Nicholas Bayard (c.1644-1707) —
of New York, New York
County, N.Y.
Born in Netherlands,
about 1644.
Mayor
of New York City, N.Y., 1685-86.
Died in 1707
(age about
63 years).
Burial location unknown.
|
|
Robert Livingston the Elder (1654-1728) —
also known as "First Lord of the Manor" —
of New York.
Born in Ancrum, Roxburghshire, Scotland,
December
13, 1654.
Fur trader;
member of New York
colonial assembly, 1709-11, 1716-26; Speaker
of New York Colonial Assembly, 1718.
Scottish
ancestry.
Died in Boston, Suffolk
County, Mass., October
1, 1728 (age 73 years, 293
days).
Burial location unknown.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Rev. John Livingston and Janet (Fleming) Livingston; married 1679 to
Alida Schuyler; father of John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775) and Gilbert
Livingston; uncle of Robert
Livingston the Younger; grandfather of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Philip
Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775) and William
Livingston; great-grandfather of Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, Margaret Livingston (who married Nicholas
Fish (1758-1833)), Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), Philip
Van Cortlandt, Henry
Brockholst Livingston, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr. and Edward
Livingston (1764-1836); great-granduncle of Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer and James
Livingston; second great-grandfather of Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Henry
Walter Livingston, Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843), Rensselaer
Westerlo, Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, William
Jay, Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873) and Hamilton
Fish (1808-1893); second great-granduncle of Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler and Maturin
Livingston; third great-grandfather of Philip
Schuyler, Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Gilbert
Livingston Thompson, Edward
Livingston (1796-1840), William
Duer, Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer, Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard, John
Jay II, John
Jacob Astor III, Nicholas
Fish (1848-1902) and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936); third great-granduncle of James
Alexander Hamilton, Gerrit
Smith and Elizabeth
Cady Stanton; fourth great-grandfather of Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer, William
Waldorf Astor, John
Kean, Hamilton
Fish Kean, Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright, Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870) and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991); fourth great-granduncle of Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer; fifth great-grandfather of Guy
Vernor Henry, Herbert
Livingston Satterlee, William
Astor Chanler, Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler, Montgomery
Schuyler Jr., Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933), Peter
Goelet Gerry, Helen
Roosevelt Robinson, Ogden
Livingston Mills, Bronson
Murray Cutting, Robert
Reginald Livingston, Robert
Winthrop Kean, Brockholst
Livingston and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996); fifth great-granduncle of Robert
Ray Hamilton; sixth great-grandfather of John
Eliot Thayer Jr., Thomas
Howard Kean, Hamilton
Fish (born 1951) and Alexa
Fish Ward; seventh great-grandfather of Thomas
Howard Kean Jr.; ancestor *** of Robert
Livingston Beeckman. |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Chapin-Fish
family of New York City, New York (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also Wikipedia article |
|
|
Pieter Schuyler (1657-1724) —
also known as Peter Schuyler —
of Albany, Albany
County, N.Y.
Born in Beverwyck, New Netherland (now Albany, Albany
County, N.Y.), 1657.
Mayor
of Albany, N.Y., 1686-94.
Died February
19, 1724 (age about 66
years).
Original interment at Dutch
Church Burial Ground, Albany, N.Y.; subsequent interment at Madison
Avenue Dutch Church, Albany, N.Y.; reinterment at Albany
Rural Cemetery, Menands, N.Y.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Pieter Pieterse Schuyler and Margarita (Van Slichtenhorst)
Schuyler; brother of Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); married 1681 to
Engeltie Van Schaick; married 1691 to
Maria Van Rensselaer; father of Margarita Schuyler (who married Robert
Livingston the Younger); uncle of John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775), Gilbert
Livingston and Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746); grandfather of Philip
P. Schuyler; granduncle of Stephanus
Bayard, Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Philip
Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775), Pierre
Van Cortlandt, William
Livingston, Philip
John Schuyler and Stephen
John Schuyler; great-grandfather of Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792), James
Livingston and Peter
Samuel Schuyler; great-granduncle of Nicholas
Bayard, Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, Philip
Van Cortlandt, Henry
Brockholst Livingston, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr. and James
Parker; second great-grandfather of Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), Edward
Livingston (1764-1836), Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Henry
Walter Livingston, Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler and Maturin
Livingston; second great-granduncle of Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843), Rensselaer
Westerlo, Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, William
Jay, Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873), Hamilton
Fish (1808-1893), George
Washington Schuyler, John
Cortlandt Parker and Philip
N. Schuyler; third great-grandfather of Philip
Schuyler, James
Alexander Hamilton, Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Edward
Livingston (1796-1840), Gerrit
Smith and Elizabeth
Cady Stanton; third great-granduncle of Gilbert
Livingston Thompson, William
Duer, Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer, Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard, John
Jay II, James
Adams Ekin, Eugene
Schuyler, Richard
Wayne Parker, Nicholas
Fish, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936) and Charles
Wolcott Parker; fourth great-grandfather of John
Jacob Astor III and Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer; fourth great-granduncle of Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer, John
Sluyter Wirt, John
Kean, Hamilton
Fish Kean, Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright, Karl
Cortlandt Schuyler and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991); fifth great-grandfather of William
Waldorf Astor, Robert
Ray Hamilton, Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870), Peter
Goelet Gerry, Ogden
Livingston Mills and Bronson
Murray Cutting; fifth great-granduncle of Guy
Vernor Henry, Herbert
Livingston Satterlee, Montgomery
Schuyler Jr., Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933), Robert
Winthrop Kean, Marietta
Peabody Tree, Endicott
Peabody and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996); sixth great-grandfather of William
Astor Chanler, Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler, Helen
Roosevelt Robinson, John
Eliot Thayer Jr., Robert
Reginald Livingston and Brockholst
Livingston; sixth great-granduncle of Thomas
Howard Kean, Hamilton
Fish (born 1951) and Alexa
Fish Ward; seventh great-granduncle of Thomas
Howard Kean Jr.; first cousin of David
Davidse Schuyler and Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler; first cousin six times removed of Henry
Newton Schuyler; first cousin seven times removed of Marion
Richard Schuyler. |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Schuyler
family of Albany, New York (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also Wikipedia
article |
|
|
Abraham de Peyster (1657-1728) —
of New York, New York
County, N.Y.
Born in Nieuw Amsterdam, Niew Neederlandt (now part of Manhattan, New York
County, N.Y.), July
8, 1657.
Mayor
of New York City, N.Y., 1691-94.
Died August
3, 1728 (age 71 years, 26
days).
Burial location unknown.
|
|
Jacobus Van Cortlandt (1658-1739) —
of New York, New York
County, N.Y.
Born in Nieuw Amsterdam, Niew Neederlandt (now part of Manhattan, New York
County, N.Y.), 1658.
Merchant;
mayor
of New York City, N.Y., 1710-11, 1719-20.
Died in Bergen, Bergen County (now part of Jersey City, Hudson
County), N.J., 1739
(age about
81 years).
Burial location unknown.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Annetje 'Anna' (Loockermans) van Cortlandt and Olof Stevense van
Cortlandt; brother of Stephanus
Van Cortlandt; married to Eva Maria de Vries; grandfather of James
Jay, John
Jay and Frederick
Jay; granduncle of Stephanus
Bayard, Pierre
Van Cortlandt, Philip
John Schuyler and Stephen
John Schuyler; great-grandfather of Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843) and William
Jay; great-granduncle of Volkert
Petrus Douw, Nicholas
Bayard, Philip
P. Schuyler, Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Hendrick
Kiliaen Van Rensselaer, Pieter
Schuyler, Philip
Van Cortlandt, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., Killian
Killian Van Rensselaer, Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler and James
Parker; second great-grandfather of John
Jay II; second great-granduncle of Leonard
Gansevoort, Leonard
Gansevoort Jr., Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Henry
Walter Livingston, James
Alexander Hamilton, Philip
Schuyler and John
Cortlandt Parker; third great-granduncle of Peter
Gansevoort, Edward
Livingston, Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer, James
Adams Ekin, Richard
Wayne Parker and Charles
Wolcott Parker; fourth great-grandfather of Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933); fourth great-granduncle of Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Ray Hamilton, John
Sluyter Wirt and Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer; fifth great-granduncle of Charles
Ludlow Livingston, John
Eliot Thayer Jr., Bronson
Murray Cutting, Marietta
Peabody Tree and Endicott
Peabody; sixth great-granduncle of John
Hubner II and Brockholst
Livingston. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also Wikipedia
article |
|
|
Johannes Cuyler (c.1661-1740) —
of Albany, Albany
County, N.Y.
Born about 1661.
Mayor
of Albany, N.Y., 1725-26.
Christian
Reformed. Dutch
ancestry.
Died in 1740
(age about
79 years).
Original interment at Dutch
Church Burial Ground, Albany, N.Y.; reinterment at Albany
Rural Cemetery, Menands, N.Y.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Hendrick Cuyler and Annatje (Schepmoes) Cuyler; brother of Maria
Cuyler (who married John
Cruger); married to Elsje Ten Broeck; father of Cornelis
Cuyler; uncle of John
Cruger Jr.; granduncle of Robert
Livingston, Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Philip
Livingston, William
Livingston and Henry
Cruger; great-granduncle of Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston and Henry
Brockholst Livingston; second great-granduncle of Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Henry
Walter Livingston, Rensselaer
Westerlo, Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843), Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, William
Jay and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873); third great-granduncle of Philip
Schuyler, Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Edward
Livingston, William
Duer, Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer, Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard and John
Jay II; fourth great-granduncle of Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer, Nicholas
Fish, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936), John
Kean, Hamilton
Fish Kean and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870); fifth great-granduncle of Herbert
Livingston Satterlee, Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933), Bronson
Murray Cutting, Robert
Reginald Livingston, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991), Robert
Winthrop Kean and Brockholst
Livingston; sixth great-granduncle of John
Eliot Thayer Jr., Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996) and Thomas
Howard Kean; seventh great-granduncle of Hamilton
Fish, Alexa
Fish Ward and Thomas
Howard Kean Jr.. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|
|
Robert Livingston the Younger (1663-1725) —
of Albany, Albany
County, N.Y.
Born in Scotland,
1663.
Mayor
of Albany, N.Y., 1710-19.
Died in Albany, Albany
County, N.Y., April
21, 1725 (age about 61
years).
Original interment at Dutch
Church Burial Ground, Albany, N.Y.; reinterment at Albany
Rural Cemetery, Menands, N.Y.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of James Livingston ; married 1697 to
Margarita Schuyler (daughter of Pieter
Schuyler); nephew of Robert
Livingston the Elder; grandfather of Margaret Beekman (who
married Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775)), Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer and James
Livingston (1747-1832); great-grandfather of Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), Edward
Livingston (1764-1836), Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler and Maturin
Livingston; second great-grandfather of Philip
Schuyler, James
Alexander Hamilton, Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Gerrit
Smith and Elizabeth
Cady Stanton; third great-grandfather of John
Jacob Astor III and Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer; fourth great-grandfather of William
Waldorf Astor, Robert
Ray Hamilton, Peter
Goelet Gerry and Ogden
Livingston Mills; fifth great-grandfather of William
Astor Chanler, Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler, Helen
Roosevelt Robinson, John
Eliot Thayer Jr. and Robert
Reginald Livingston; first cousin of John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775) and Gilbert
Livingston; first cousin once removed of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Philip
Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775) and William
Livingston; first cousin twice removed of Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, Philip
Van Cortlandt, Henry
Brockholst Livingston and Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr.; first cousin thrice removed of Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Henry
Walter Livingston, Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843), Rensselaer
Westerlo, Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, William
Jay, Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873) and Hamilton
Fish (1808-1893); first cousin four times removed of Gilbert
Livingston Thompson, Edward
Livingston (1796-1840), William
Duer, Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer, Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard, John
Jay II, Nicholas
Fish and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936); first cousin five times removed of Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer, John
Kean, Hamilton
Fish Kean, Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright, Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870) and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991); first cousin six times removed of Guy
Vernor Henry, Herbert
Livingston Satterlee, Montgomery
Schuyler Jr., Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933), Bronson
Murray Cutting, Robert
Winthrop Kean, Brockholst
Livingston and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996); first cousin seven times removed of Thomas
Howard Kean, Hamilton
Fish (born 1951) and Alexa
Fish Ward. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also Wikipedia article |
|
|
Pieter Van Brugh (1666-1740) —
also known as Pieter Verbrugge —
of Albany, Albany
County, N.Y.
Born in 1666.
Mayor
of Albany, N.Y., 1699-1700, 1721-23.
Dutch
and Norwegian
ancestry.
Died in 1740
(age about
74 years).
Interment at Dutch
Church Burial Ground, Albany, N.Y.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Johannes Pieterse Van Brugh and Trijntje (Roeloffs) Van Brugh;
married 1688 to
Sarah Cuyler; grandfather of Robert
Livingston, Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Philip
Livingston and William
Livingston; great-grandfather of Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston and Henry
Brockholst Livingston; second great-grandfather of Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Henry
Walter Livingston, Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843), Rensselaer
Westerlo, Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, William
Jay and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873); third great-grandfather of Philip
Schuyler, Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Edward
Livingston, William
Duer, Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer, Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard and John
Jay II; fourth great-grandfather of Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer, Nicholas
Fish, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936), John
Kean, Hamilton
Fish Kean and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870); fifth great-grandfather of Herbert
Livingston Satterlee, Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933), Bronson
Murray Cutting, Robert
Reginald Livingston, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991), Robert
Winthrop Kean and Brockholst
Livingston; sixth great-grandfather of John
Eliot Thayer Jr., Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996) and Thomas
Howard Kean; seventh great-grandfather of Hamilton
Fish, Alexa
Fish Ward and Thomas
Howard Kean Jr.. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also Wikipedia
article — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Johannes de Peyster (1666-1711) —
of New York, New York
County, N.Y.
Born in New York, New York
County, N.Y., September
21, 1666.
Mayor
of New York City, N.Y., 1698-99.
Died September
25, 1711 (age 45 years, 4
days).
Burial location unknown.
|
|
Phillip French (1667-1707) —
also known as Phillip French Van London —
of New York, New York
County, N.Y.
Born in Suffolk, England,
1667.
Mayor
of New York City, N.Y., 1702-03.
Died in New York, New York
County, N.Y., 1707
(age about
40 years).
Burial location unknown.
|
|
Johannes Schuyler (1668-1747) —
also known as John Schuyler —
of Albany, Albany
County, N.Y.
Born in Albany, Albany
County, N.Y., 1668.
Mayor
of Albany, N.Y., 1703-06.
Died in Albany, Albany
County, N.Y., June 25,
1747 (age about 78
years).
Original interment at Dutch
Church Burial Ground, Albany, N.Y.; reinterment at Albany
Rural Cemetery, Menands, N.Y.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Philip Pieterse Schuyler and Mararetta (Van Sclichtenhorst)
Schuyler; brother of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724); married 1694 to
Elizabeth Staats; father of Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746); uncle of John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775) and Gilbert
Livingston; grandfather of Philip
John Schuyler and Stephen
John Schuyler; granduncle of Stephanus
Bayard, Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Philip
Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775), Pierre
Van Cortlandt, William
Livingston and Philip
P. Schuyler; great-grandfather of Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792) and Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler; great-granduncle of Nicholas
Bayard, Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), James
Livingston, Philip
Van Cortlandt, Henry
Brockholst Livingston, Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., Edward
Livingston (1764-1836) and James
Parker; second great-grandfather of Henry
Walter Livingston, Philip
Schuyler and James
Alexander Hamilton; second great-granduncle of Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Maturin
Livingston, Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843), Rensselaer
Westerlo, Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, William
Jay, Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873), Hamilton
Fish (1808-1893), George
Washington Schuyler, John
Cortlandt Parker and Philip
N. Schuyler; third great-grandfather of Edward
Livingston (1796-1840); third great-granduncle of Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Gilbert
Livingston Thompson, Gerrit
Smith, William
Duer, Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer, Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard, Elizabeth
Cady Stanton, John
Jay II, James
Adams Ekin, John
Jacob Astor III, Eugene
Schuyler, Richard
Wayne Parker, Nicholas
Fish, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936) and Charles
Wolcott Parker; fourth great-grandfather of Robert
Ray Hamilton; fourth great-granduncle of Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer, William
Waldorf Astor, John
Sluyter Wirt, John
Kean, Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Hamilton
Fish Kean, Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright, Karl
Cortlandt Schuyler and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991); fifth great-grandfather of Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870), John
Eliot Thayer Jr. and Bronson
Murray Cutting; fifth great-granduncle of Guy
Vernor Henry, Herbert
Livingston Satterlee, William
Astor Chanler, Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler, Montgomery
Schuyler Jr., Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933), Peter
Goelet Gerry, Helen
Roosevelt Robinson, Ogden
Livingston Mills, Robert
Reginald Livingston, Robert
Winthrop Kean, Marietta
Peabody Tree, Endicott
Peabody and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996); sixth great-grandfather of Brockholst
Livingston; sixth great-granduncle of Thomas
Howard Kean, Hamilton
Fish (born 1951) and Alexa
Fish Ward; seventh great-granduncle of Thomas
Howard Kean Jr.; first cousin of David
Davidse Schuyler and Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler; first cousin six times removed of Henry
Newton Schuyler; first cousin seven times removed of Marion
Richard Schuyler. |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Schuyler
family of Albany, New York (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|
|
David Davidse Schuyler (1669-1715) —
also known as David Schuyler —
of Albany, Albany
County, N.Y.
Born in Albany, Albany
County, N.Y., June
11, 1669.
Mayor
of Albany, N.Y., 1706-07.
Died December
16, 1715 (age 46 years, 188
days).
Original interment at a
private or family graveyard, Essex County, N.Y.; reinterment at
Albany
Rural Cemetery, Menands, N.Y.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Davit Pieterse Schuyler and Catalina (Ver Planck) Schuyler;
brother of Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler; fourth great-granduncle of Henry
Newton Schuyler; fifth great-granduncle of Marion
Richard Schuyler; first cousin of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724) and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); first cousin once removed of John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775), Gilbert
Livingston and Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746); first cousin twice removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Philip
Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775), Pierre
Van Cortlandt, William
Livingston, Philip
John Schuyler, Philip
P. Schuyler and Stephen
John Schuyler; first cousin thrice removed of Nicholas
Bayard, Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792), Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), James
Livingston, Philip
Van Cortlandt, Henry
Brockholst Livingston, Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., Edward
Livingston (1764-1836), Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler and James
Parker; first cousin four times removed of Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Henry
Walter Livingston, Maturin
Livingston, Rensselaer
Westerlo, Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843), Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, Philip
Schuyler, James
Alexander Hamilton, William
Jay, Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873), Hamilton
Fish, George
Washington Schuyler, John
Cortlandt Parker and Philip
N. Schuyler; first cousin five times removed of Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Gilbert
Livingston Thompson, Edward
Livingston (1796-1840), Gerrit
Smith, William
Duer, Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer, Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard, Elizabeth
Cady Stanton, John
Jay II, James
Adams Ekin, John
Jacob Astor III, Eugene
Schuyler, Richard
Wayne Parker, Nicholas
Fish, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936) and Charles
Wolcott Parker; first cousin six times removed of Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer, William
Waldorf Astor, Robert
Ray Hamilton, John
Sluyter Wirt, John
Kean, Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Hamilton
Fish Kean, Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright, Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870), Karl
Cortlandt Schuyler and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991); first cousin seven times removed of Guy
Vernor Henry, Herbert
Livingston Satterlee, William
Astor Chanler, Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler, Montgomery
Schuyler Jr., Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933), Peter
Goelet Gerry, Helen
Roosevelt Robinson, Ogden
Livingston Mills, John
Eliot Thayer Jr., Bronson
Murray Cutting, Robert
Reginald Livingston, Robert
Winthrop Kean, Brockholst
Livingston, Marietta
Peabody Tree, Endicott
Peabody and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996). |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Schuyler
family of Albany, New York (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|
|
David Provost (1670-1724) —
of New York, New York
County, N.Y.
Born in New York, New York
County, N.Y., January
16, 1670.
Mayor
of New York City, N.Y., 1699-1700.
Dutch
and French
Huguenot ancestry.
Died in 1724
(age about
54 years).
Burial location unknown.
|
|
Myndert Davidtse Schuyler (1672-1755) —
also known as Myndert Schuyler —
of Albany, Albany
County, N.Y.
Born in Colonie, Albany
County, N.Y., 1672.
Merchant;
mayor
of Albany, N.Y., 1719-21, 1723-25.
Died in Albany, Albany
County, N.Y., October
21, 1755 (age about 83
years).
Original interment at Dutch
Church Burial Ground, Albany, N.Y.; reinterment at Albany
Rural Cemetery, Menands, N.Y.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Davit Pieterse Schuyler and Catharina (Ver Planck) Schuyler;
brother of David
Davidse Schuyler; fourth great-granduncle of Henry
Newton Schuyler; fifth great-granduncle of Marion
Richard Schuyler; first cousin of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724) and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); first cousin once removed of John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775), Gilbert
Livingston and Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746); first cousin twice removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Philip
Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775), Pierre
Van Cortlandt, William
Livingston, Philip
John Schuyler, Philip
P. Schuyler and Stephen
John Schuyler; first cousin thrice removed of Nicholas
Bayard, Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792), Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), James
Livingston, Philip
Van Cortlandt, Henry
Brockholst Livingston, Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., Edward
Livingston (1764-1836), Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler and James
Parker; first cousin four times removed of Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Henry
Walter Livingston, Maturin
Livingston, Rensselaer
Westerlo, Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843), Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, Philip
Schuyler, James
Alexander Hamilton, William
Jay, Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873), Hamilton
Fish, George
Washington Schuyler, John
Cortlandt Parker and Philip
N. Schuyler; first cousin five times removed of Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Gilbert
Livingston Thompson, Edward
Livingston (1796-1840), Gerrit
Smith, William
Duer, Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer, Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard, Elizabeth
Cady Stanton, John
Jay II, James
Adams Ekin, John
Jacob Astor III, Eugene
Schuyler, Richard
Wayne Parker, Nicholas
Fish, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936) and Charles
Wolcott Parker; first cousin six times removed of Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer, William
Waldorf Astor, Robert
Ray Hamilton, John
Sluyter Wirt, John
Kean, Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Hamilton
Fish Kean, Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright, Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870), Karl
Cortlandt Schuyler and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991); first cousin seven times removed of Guy
Vernor Henry, Herbert
Livingston Satterlee, William
Astor Chanler, Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler, Montgomery
Schuyler Jr., Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933), Peter
Goelet Gerry, Helen
Roosevelt Robinson, Ogden
Livingston Mills, John
Eliot Thayer Jr., Bronson
Murray Cutting, Robert
Reginald Livingston, Robert
Winthrop Kean, Brockholst
Livingston, Marietta
Peabody Tree, Endicott
Peabody and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996). |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Schuyler
family of Albany, New York (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|
|
John Cruger (1678-1744) —
of New York, New York
County, N.Y.
Born in Germany,
1678.
Merchant;
mayor
of New York City, N.Y., 1739-44; died in office 1744.
Dutch
Reformed; later Anglican.
Danish
ancestry.
Died in New York, New York
County, N.Y., August
13, 1744 (age about 66
years).
Burial location unknown.
|
|
John Livingston (1680-1720) —
of Connecticut.
Born in April
26, 1680.
Member of Connecticut
colonial assembly, 1710.
Died February
1, 1720 (age 39 years, 281
days).
Burial location unknown.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Robert
Livingston the Elder and Alida (Schuyler) Livingston; brother of
Robert
Livingston (1688-1775) and Gilbert
Livingston; married, April 1,
1701, to Mary Winthrop (daughter of Fitz-John
Winthrop); nephew of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724) and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); uncle of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Philip
Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775) and William
Livingston; granduncle of Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), Philip
Van Cortlandt, Henry
Brockholst Livingston, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr. and Edward
Livingston (1764-1836); great-granduncle of Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Henry
Walter Livingston, Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843), Rensselaer
Westerlo, Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, William
Jay, Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873) and Hamilton
Fish (1808-1893); second great-granduncle of Philip
Schuyler, Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Gilbert
Livingston Thompson, Edward
Livingston (1796-1840), William
Duer, Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer, Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard, John
Jay II, John
Jacob Astor III, Nicholas
Fish and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936); third great-granduncle of Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer, William
Waldorf Astor, John
Kean, Hamilton
Fish Kean, Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright, Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870) and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991); fourth great-granduncle of Guy
Vernor Henry, Herbert
Livingston Satterlee, William
Astor Chanler, Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler, Montgomery
Schuyler Jr., Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933), Peter
Goelet Gerry, Helen
Roosevelt Robinson, Ogden
Livingston Mills, Bronson
Murray Cutting, Robert
Reginald Livingston, Robert
Winthrop Kean, Brockholst
Livingston and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996); fifth great-granduncle of John
Eliot Thayer Jr., Thomas
Howard Kean, Hamilton
Fish (born 1951) and Alexa
Fish Ward; sixth great-granduncle of Thomas
Howard Kean Jr.; first cousin of Robert
Livingston the Younger and Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746); first cousin once removed of David
Davidse Schuyler, Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler, Stephanus
Bayard, Pierre
Van Cortlandt, Philip
John Schuyler, Philip
P. Schuyler and Stephen
John Schuyler; first cousin twice removed of Nicholas
Bayard, Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792), James
Livingston, Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler and James
Parker; first cousin thrice removed of Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Maturin
Livingston, James
Alexander Hamilton, George
Washington Schuyler, John
Cortlandt Parker and Philip
N. Schuyler; first cousin four times removed of Gerrit
Smith, Elizabeth
Cady Stanton, James
Adams Ekin, Eugene
Schuyler, Richard
Wayne Parker and Charles
Wolcott Parker; first cousin five times removed of Robert
Ray Hamilton, John
Sluyter Wirt, Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer and Karl
Cortlandt Schuyler; first cousin six times removed of Marietta
Peabody Tree and Endicott
Peabody; second cousin five times removed of Henry
Newton Schuyler. |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Winthrop
#2 family of Boston, Massachusetts (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|
|
Dirck Ten Broeck (1686-1751) —
of Albany, Albany
County, N.Y.
Born in Albany, Albany
County, N.Y., December
4, 1686.
Mayor
of Albany, N.Y., 1746-48.
Dutch
ancestry.
Died in North Castle, Westchester
County, N.Y., January
7, 1751 (age 64 years, 34
days).
Burial location unknown.
|
|
Robert Livingston (1688-1775) —
of New York.
Born in Albany, Albany
County, N.Y., 1688.
Member of New York
colonial assembly, 1726-27.
Died in Livingston Manor, Sullivan
County, N.Y., June 27,
1775 (age about 86
years).
Burial location unknown.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Robert
Livingston the Elder and Alida (Schuyler) Livingston; brother of
John
Livingston and Gilbert
Livingston; married 1717 to
Margaret Howerden; father of Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775); nephew of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724) and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); uncle of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Philip
Livingston and William
Livingston; grandfather of Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), Alida Livingston (who married John
Armstrong Jr.), Gertrude Livingston (who married Morgan
Lewis) and Edward
Livingston (1764-1836); granduncle of Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, Philip
Van Cortlandt, Henry
Brockholst Livingston and Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr.; great-grandfather of Robert
Livingston Tillotson; great-granduncle of Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Henry
Walter Livingston, Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843), Rensselaer
Westerlo, Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, William
Jay, Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873) and Hamilton
Fish (1808-1893); second great-grandfather of John
Jacob Astor III; second great-granduncle of Philip
Schuyler, Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Gilbert
Livingston Thompson, Edward
Livingston (1796-1840), William
Duer, Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer, Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard, John
Jay II, Nicholas
Fish and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936); third great-grandfather of William
Waldorf Astor; third great-granduncle of Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer, John
Kean, Hamilton
Fish Kean, Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright, Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870) and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991); fourth great-grandfather of William
Astor Chanler, Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler, Peter
Goelet Gerry, Helen
Roosevelt Robinson, Ogden
Livingston Mills and Robert
Reginald Livingston; fourth great-granduncle of Guy
Vernor Henry, Herbert
Livingston Satterlee, Montgomery
Schuyler Jr., Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933), Bronson
Murray Cutting, Robert
Winthrop Kean, Brockholst
Livingston and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996); fifth great-granduncle of John
Eliot Thayer Jr., Thomas
Howard Kean, Hamilton
Fish (born 1951) and Alexa
Fish Ward; sixth great-granduncle of Thomas
Howard Kean Jr.; first cousin of Robert
Livingston the Younger and Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746); first cousin once removed of David
Davidse Schuyler, Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler, Stephanus
Bayard, Pierre
Van Cortlandt, Philip
John Schuyler, Philip
P. Schuyler and Stephen
John Schuyler; first cousin twice removed of Nicholas
Bayard, Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792), James
Livingston, Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler and James
Parker; first cousin thrice removed of Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, James
Alexander Hamilton, George
Washington Schuyler, John
Cortlandt Parker and Philip
N. Schuyler; first cousin four times removed of Gerrit
Smith, Elizabeth
Cady Stanton, James
Adams Ekin, Eugene
Schuyler, Richard
Wayne Parker and Charles
Wolcott Parker; first cousin five times removed of Robert
Ray Hamilton, John
Sluyter Wirt, Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer and Karl
Cortlandt Schuyler; first cousin six times removed of Marietta
Peabody Tree and Endicott
Peabody; second cousin five times removed of Henry
Newton Schuyler. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also Wikipedia article |
|
|
Gilbert Livingston (1690-1746) —
of New York.
Born in March
3, 1690.
Member of New York
colonial assembly, 1728-37.
Dutch
Reformed.
Died April
25, 1746 (age 56 years, 53
days).
Interment at Old Dutch Churchyard, Kingston, N.Y.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Robert
Livingston the Elder and Alida (Schuyler) Livingston; brother of
John
Livingston and Robert
Livingston (1688-1775); married to Cornelia Beekman; father of Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston and Joanna Livingston (who married Pierre
Van Cortlandt); nephew of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724) and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); uncle of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Philip
Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775) and William
Livingston; grandfather of Philip
Van Cortlandt and Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr.; granduncle of Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), Henry
Brockholst Livingston and Edward
Livingston (1764-1836); great-grandfather of Hamilton
Fish (1808-1893); great-granduncle of Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Henry
Walter Livingston, Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843), Rensselaer
Westerlo, Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, William
Jay and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873); second great-grandfather of Gilbert
Livingston Thompson, Nicholas
Fish and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936); second great-granduncle 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; third great-grandfather of Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991); third great-granduncle of Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer, William
Waldorf Astor, John
Kean, Hamilton
Fish Kean and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870); fourth great-grandfather of Guy
Vernor Henry, Montgomery
Schuyler Jr. and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996); fourth great-granduncle of Herbert
Livingston Satterlee, William
Astor Chanler, Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler, Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933), Peter
Goelet Gerry, Helen
Roosevelt Robinson, Ogden
Livingston Mills, Bronson
Murray Cutting, Robert
Reginald Livingston, Robert
Winthrop Kean and Brockholst
Livingston; fifth great-grandfather of Hamilton
Fish (born 1951) and Alexa
Fish Ward; fifth great-granduncle of John
Eliot Thayer Jr. and Thomas
Howard Kean; sixth great-granduncle of Thomas
Howard Kean Jr.; first cousin of Robert
Livingston the Younger and Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746); first cousin once removed of David
Davidse Schuyler, Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler, Stephanus
Bayard, Philip
John Schuyler, Philip
P. Schuyler and Stephen
John Schuyler; first cousin twice removed of Nicholas
Bayard, Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792), James
Livingston, Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler and James
Parker; first cousin thrice removed of Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Maturin
Livingston, James
Alexander Hamilton, George
Washington Schuyler, John
Cortlandt Parker and Philip
N. Schuyler; first cousin four times removed of Gerrit
Smith, Elizabeth
Cady Stanton, James
Adams Ekin, Eugene
Schuyler, Richard
Wayne Parker and Charles
Wolcott Parker; first cousin five times removed of Robert
Ray Hamilton, John
Sluyter Wirt, Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer and Karl
Cortlandt Schuyler; first cousin six times removed of Marietta
Peabody Tree and Endicott
Peabody; second cousin five times removed of Henry
Newton Schuyler. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Richard Randolph (1690-1748) —
Born in Henrico
County, Va., 1690.
Planter;
merchant;
member of Virginia
House of Burgesses, 1727-48; died in office 1748.
Died in Bath, England,
December
17, 1748 (age about 58
years).
Burial location unknown.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of William Randolph and Mary (Isham) Randolph; married 1724 to Jane
Kennon Bolling; uncle of Richard
Bland and Peyton
Randolph (1721-1775); grandfather of John
Randolph of Roanoke; granduncle of Theodorick
Bland, Thomas
Jefferson, Edmund
Jenings Randolph and Beverley
Randolph; great-grandfather of Thomas
Mann Randolph Jr.; great-granduncle of John
Marshall, Henry
Lee, Charles
Lee, Richard
Bland Lee, James
Markham Marshall, Alexander
Keith Marshall, Edmund
Jennings Lee, Martha
Jefferson, Dabney
Carr, Peyton
Randolph (1779-1828) and Henry
St. George Tucker; second great-grandfather of Benjamin
Franklin Randolph, Meriwether
Lewis Randolph and George
Wythe Randolph; second great-granduncle of Thomas
Marshall, James
Keith Marshall, Francis
Wayles Eppes, Dabney
Smith Carr, Edmund
Randolph, Nathaniel
Beverly Tucker, Carter
Henry Harrison and John
Breckinridge Castleman; third great-grandfather of Thomas
Jefferson Coolidge; third great-granduncle of Fitzhugh
Lee, William
Henry Fitzhugh Lee, Edmund
Randolph Cocke, John
Augustine Marshall, Carter
Henry Harrison II and Frederick
Madison Roberts; fourth great-grandfather of John
Gardner Coolidge; fourth great-granduncle of Edith
Wilson, William
Marshall Bullitt, Alexander
Scott Bullitt and Francis
Beverley Biddle; fifth great-granduncle of William
Welby Beverley; sixth great-granduncle of Lee
Marvin; first cousin thrice removed of John
Wayles Eppes; first cousin five times removed of William
Henry Robertson. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also Wikipedia
article — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
James Alexander (1691-1756) —
Born in Muthill, Perthshire, Scotland,
May
27, 1691.
In Scotland, he joined the Jacobite Rising of 1715, a revolt
that attempted to install James Francis Edward Stuart (the "Old
Pretender") as king; to avoid prosecution
for treason,
he fled
to New York; surveyor;
lawyer;
member New York governor's council, 1721-32, 1737; Colonial
Attorney-General of New York, 1721-23.
Member, American
Philosophical Society.
Died in New York, April 2,
1756 (age 64 years, 311
days).
Interment at Trinity
Churchyard, Manhattan, N.Y.
|
|
Johannes DePeyster (1694-1783) —
also known as John DePeyster —
of Albany, Albany
County, N.Y.
Born in 1694.
Mayor
of Albany, N.Y., 1729-31, 1732-33.
Died February
27, 1783 (age about 88
years).
Original interment at Dutch
Church Burial Ground, Albany, N.Y.; reinterment at Albany
Rural Cemetery, Menands, N.Y.
|
|
Johannes Schuyler (1697-1746) —
of Albany, Albany
County, N.Y.
Born in Albany, Albany
County, N.Y., 1697.
Mayor
of Albany, N.Y., 1741-42.
Died in Albany
County, N.Y., 1746
(age about
49 years).
Original interment at a private or family graveyard, Albany County, N.Y.; reinterment
at Albany
Rural Cemetery, Menands, N.Y.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747) and Elizabeth (Staats) Schuyler; father of
Philip
John Schuyler and Stephen
John Schuyler; nephew of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724); grandfather of Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792) and Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler; great-grandfather of Henry
Walter Livingston, Philip
Schuyler and James
Alexander Hamilton; second great-grandfather of Edward
Livingston (1796-1840); third great-grandfather of Robert
Ray Hamilton; fourth great-grandfather of Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870), John
Eliot Thayer Jr. and Bronson
Murray Cutting; fifth great-grandfather of Brockholst
Livingston; first cousin of John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775) and Gilbert
Livingston; first cousin once removed of David
Davidse Schuyler, Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler, Stephanus
Bayard, Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Philip
Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775), Pierre
Van Cortlandt, William
Livingston and Philip
P. Schuyler; first cousin twice removed of Nicholas
Bayard, Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), James
Livingston, Philip
Van Cortlandt, Henry
Brockholst Livingston, Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., Edward
Livingston (1764-1836) and James
Parker; first cousin thrice removed of Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Maturin
Livingston, Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843), Rensselaer
Westerlo, Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, William
Jay, Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873), Hamilton
Fish (1808-1893), George
Washington Schuyler, John
Cortlandt Parker and Philip
N. Schuyler; first cousin four times removed of Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Gilbert
Livingston Thompson, Gerrit
Smith, William
Duer, Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer, Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard, Elizabeth
Cady Stanton, John
Jay II, James
Adams Ekin, John
Jacob Astor III, Eugene
Schuyler, Richard
Wayne Parker, Nicholas
Fish, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936) and Charles
Wolcott Parker; first cousin five times removed of Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer, William
Waldorf Astor, John
Sluyter Wirt, John
Kean, Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Hamilton
Fish Kean, Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright, Karl
Cortlandt Schuyler and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991); first cousin six times removed of Guy
Vernor Henry, Herbert
Livingston Satterlee, William
Astor Chanler, Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler, Montgomery
Schuyler Jr., Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933), Peter
Goelet Gerry, Helen
Roosevelt Robinson, Ogden
Livingston Mills, Robert
Reginald Livingston, Robert
Winthrop Kean, Marietta
Peabody Tree, Endicott
Peabody and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996); first cousin seven times removed of Thomas
Howard Kean, Hamilton
Fish (born 1951) and Alexa
Fish Ward; second cousin five times removed of Henry
Newton Schuyler. |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Schuyler
family of Albany, New York (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Cornelis Cuyler (1697-1765) —
of Albany, Albany
County, N.Y.
Born in 1697.
Mayor
of Albany, N.Y., 1742-46.
Dutch
ancestry.
Died in Albany, Albany
County, N.Y., April
14, 1765 (age about 67
years).
Burial location unknown.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Johannes
Cuyler and Elsje (Ten Broeck) Cuyler; grandson of Dirck
Wesselse Ten Broeck; first cousin of Dirck
Ten Broeck and John
Cruger Jr.; first cousin once removed of Robert
Livingston, Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Philip
Livingston, William
Livingston and Henry
Cruger; first cousin twice removed of Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, James
Livingston and Henry
Brockholst Livingston; first cousin thrice removed of Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Henry
Walter Livingston, Rensselaer
Westerlo, Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843), Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, Peter
Gansevoort, William
Jay and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873); first cousin four times removed of
Philip
Schuyler, Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Edward
Livingston, Gerrit
Smith, William
Duer, Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer, Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard, Elizabeth
Cady Stanton and John
Jay II; first cousin five times removed of Henry
Newton Schuyler, Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer, Nicholas
Fish, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936), John
Kean, Hamilton
Fish Kean and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870); first cousin six times removed of
Herbert
Livingston Satterlee, Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933), Bronson
Murray Cutting, Robert
Reginald Livingston, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991), Marion
Richard Schuyler, Robert
Winthrop Kean and Brockholst
Livingston; first cousin seven times removed of John
Eliot Thayer Jr., Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996) and Thomas
Howard Kean; second cousin twice removed of Barent
Van Buren and Martin
Van Buren; second cousin thrice removed of John
Van Buren; second cousin four times removed of Thomas
Brodhead Van Buren; second cousin five times removed of Harold
Sheffield Van Buren. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also Wikipedia
article |
|
|
Stephanus Bayard (1700-1757) —
also known as Stephen Bayard —
of New York, New York
County, N.Y.
Born in New York, New York
County, N.Y., 1700.
Mayor
of New York City, N.Y., 1744-47.
Died in Bergen
County, N.J., 1757
(age about
57 years).
Burial location unknown.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Samuel Bayard and Margaretta (Van Cortlandt) Bayard; married, March
12, 1724, to Alida Vetch; uncle of Nicholas
Bayard (1736-1802); grandson of Stephanus
Van Cortlandt and Nicholas
Bayard (c.1644-1707); grandnephew of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724), Jacobus
Van Cortlandt and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); great-grandnephew of Pieter
Stuyvesant; great-granduncle of James
Adams Ekin; second great-granduncle of John
Sluyter Wirt; fourth great-grandfather of John
Eliot Thayer Jr. and Bronson
Murray Cutting; first cousin of Pierre
Van Cortlandt, Philip
John Schuyler and Stephen
John Schuyler; first cousin once removed of John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775), Gilbert
Livingston, Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746), Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792), Philip
Van Cortlandt, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler and James
Parker; first cousin twice removed of David
Davidse Schuyler, Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler, Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Henry
Walter Livingston, James
Alexander Hamilton, Philip
Schuyler and John
Cortlandt Parker; first cousin thrice removed of Edward
Livingston (1796-1840), Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer, Richard
Wayne Parker and Charles
Wolcott Parker; first cousin four times removed of Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer and Robert
Ray Hamilton; first cousin five times removed of Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870), Marietta
Peabody Tree and Endicott
Peabody; first cousin six times removed of Brockholst
Livingston; second cousin of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Philip
Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775), William
Livingston, James
Jay, Philip
P. Schuyler, John
Jay and Frederick
Jay; second cousin once removed of Volkert
Petrus Douw, Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, John
Bubenheim Bayard, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, Hendrick
Kiliaen Van Rensselaer, Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), James
Livingston, Henry
Brockholst Livingston, Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Killian
Killian Van Rensselaer, Edward
Livingston (1764-1836), Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843) and William
Jay; second cousin twice removed of Leonard
Gansevoort, Leonard
Gansevoort Jr., Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, James
Asheton Bayard Sr., Maturin
Livingston, Rensselaer
Westerlo, Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873), Hamilton
Fish, George
Washington Schuyler, John
Jay II and Philip
N. Schuyler; second cousin thrice removed of Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Peter
Gansevoort, Gilbert
Livingston Thompson, Richard
Henry Bayard, Littleton
Kirkpatrick, Gerrit
Smith, James
Asheton Bayard Jr., William
Duer, Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard, Elizabeth
Cady Stanton, John
Jacob Astor III, Eugene
Schuyler, Nicholas
Fish and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936); second cousin four times removed of Thomas
Francis Bayard Sr., Andrew
Kirkpatrick, William
Waldorf Astor, John
Kean, Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Hamilton
Fish Kean, Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright, Karl
Cortlandt Schuyler, Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933) and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991); second cousin five times removed of Guy
Vernor Henry, Herbert
Livingston Satterlee, William
Astor Chanler, Thomas
Francis Bayard Jr., Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler, Montgomery
Schuyler Jr., Peter
Goelet Gerry, Helen
Roosevelt Robinson, Ogden
Livingston Mills, Robert
Reginald Livingston, Robert
Winthrop Kean and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996). |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; DuPont-Bayard
family of Wilmington, Delaware; Parker-Schuyler
family of Perth Amboy, New Jersey (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also Wikipedia
article |
|
|
Robert Livingston (1708-1790) —
also known as "Third Lord of the Manor" —
of New York.
Born in Albany, Albany
County, N.Y., December
16, 1708.
Member of New York
colonial assembly, 1737-58.
Died in Clermont, Columbia
County, N.Y., November
27, 1790 (age 81 years, 346
days).
Interment at Linlithgo Reformed Church Cemetery, Linlithgo, N.Y.
|  |
Relatives:
Brother of Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Philip
Livingston and William
Livingston; father-in-law of James
Duane; father of Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794) and Walter
Livingston; nephew of John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775) and Gilbert
Livingston; uncle by marriage of William
Duer (1747-1799); uncle of Philip
Peter Livingston, Catherine Livingston (who married Nicholas
Bayard), Susannah Livingston (who married John
Cleves Symmes), Susanna Livingston (who married John
Kean (1756-1795)), Sarah Van Brugh Livingston (who married John
Jay) and Henry
Brockholst Livingston; grandson of Robert
Livingston the Elder and Pieter
Van Brugh; grandfather of Henry
Walter Livingston; grandnephew of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724), Johannes
Cuyler and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); granduncle of Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843), Rensselaer
Westerlo, Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, William
Jay and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873); great-grandfather of Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859) and Edward
Livingston (1796-1840); great-granduncle of Philip
Schuyler, William
Duer (1805-1879), Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer, Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard and John
Jay II; second great-granduncle of Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer, Nicholas
Fish, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936), John
Kean (1852-1914) and Hamilton
Fish Kean; third great-grandfather of Herbert
Livingston Satterlee, Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870) and Bronson
Murray Cutting; third great-granduncle of Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933), Robert
Reginald Livingston, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991) and Robert
Winthrop Kean; fourth great-grandfather of Brockholst
Livingston; fourth great-granduncle of John
Eliot Thayer Jr., Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996) and Thomas
Howard Kean; fifth great-granduncle of Hamilton
Fish (born 1951), Alexa
Fish Ward and Thomas
Howard Kean Jr.; first cousin of Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston and Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775); first cousin once removed of Robert
Livingston the Younger, Cornelis
Cuyler, Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746), John
Cruger Jr., Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), Philip
Van Cortlandt, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr. and Edward
Livingston (1764-1836); first cousin twice removed of David
Davidse Schuyler, Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler and Hamilton
Fish (1808-1893); first cousin thrice removed of Gilbert
Livingston Thompson and John
Jacob Astor III; first cousin four times removed of William
Waldorf Astor and Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright; first cousin five times removed of Guy
Vernor Henry, William
Astor Chanler, Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler, Montgomery
Schuyler Jr., Peter
Goelet Gerry, Helen
Roosevelt Robinson and Ogden
Livingston Mills; second cousin of Stephanus
Bayard, Pierre
Van Cortlandt, Philip
John Schuyler, Philip
P. Schuyler, Stephen
John Schuyler and Henry
Cruger; second cousin once removed of Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792), James
Livingston, Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler and James
Parker; second cousin twice removed of Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Maturin
Livingston, James
Alexander Hamilton, George
Washington Schuyler, John
Cortlandt Parker and Philip
N. Schuyler; second cousin thrice removed of Gerrit
Smith, Elizabeth
Cady Stanton, James
Adams Ekin, Eugene
Schuyler, Richard
Wayne Parker and Charles
Wolcott Parker; second cousin four times removed of Robert
Ray Hamilton, John
Sluyter Wirt, Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer and Karl
Cortlandt Schuyler; second cousin five times removed of Marietta
Peabody Tree and Endicott
Peabody. |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Livingston-Duer
family of New York City, New York (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also Wikipedia article — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Richard Bland (1710-1776) —
of Virginia.
Born in Orange
County, Va., May 6,
1710.
Delegate
to Continental Congress from Virginia, 1774.
Died in Williamsburg,
Va., October
26, 1776 (age 66 years, 173
days).
Interment in private or family graveyard.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Richard Bland (1665-1720) and Elizabeth (Randolph) Bland; married
to Martha Macon; nephew of Richard
Randolph; uncle of Theodorick
Bland (1742-1790); granduncle of Henry
Lee, Charles
Lee, Richard
Bland Lee, Edmund
Jennings Lee, John
Randolph of Roanoke and Henry
St. George Tucker; great-granduncle of Nathaniel
Beverly Tucker; second great-granduncle of Fitzhugh
Lee and William
Henry Fitzhugh Lee; fourth great-granduncle of William
Welby Beverley; fifth great-granduncle of Lee
Marvin; first cousin of Peyton
Randolph (1721-1775); first cousin once removed of Thomas
Jefferson, Edmund
Jenings Randolph and Beverley
Randolph; first cousin twice removed of John
Marshall, James
Markham Marshall, Thomas
Mann Randolph Jr., Alexander
Keith Marshall, Martha
Jefferson Randolph, Dabney
Carr, Theodorick
Bland (1776-1846) and Peyton
Randolph (1779-1828); first cousin thrice removed of Thomas
Marshall, James
Keith Marshall, Francis
Wayles Eppes, Dabney
Smith Carr, Benjamin
Franklin Randolph, Meriwether
Lewis Randolph, George
Wythe Randolph, Edmund
Randolph, Carter
Henry Harrison and John
Breckinridge Castleman; first cousin four times removed of Thomas
Jefferson Coolidge, Edmund
Randolph Cocke, John
Augustine Marshall, Carter
Henry Harrison II and Frederick
Madison Roberts; first cousin five times removed of John
Gardner Coolidge, Edith
Wilson, William
Marshall Bullitt, Alexander
Scott Bullitt and Francis
Beverley Biddle; second cousin twice removed of John
Wayles Eppes; second cousin four times removed of William
Henry Robertson. |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Lee-Mason
family of Virginia (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | Bland County,
Va. is named for him. |
|  | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page |
|
|
Peter Van Brugh Livingston (1710-1792) —
also known as Peter V. B. Livingston —
of New
York County, N.Y.
Born in Albany, Albany
County, N.Y., November
3, 1710.
Member of New York
state assembly from New York County, 1784-85.
Died in Albany, Albany
County, N.Y., December
28, 1792 (age 82 years, 55
days).
Burial location unknown.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Philip Livingston (1686-1749) and Catherine (Van Brugh)
Livingston; brother of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Philip
Livingston (1716-1778) and William
Livingston; father of Philip
Peter Livingston, Catherine Livingston (who married Nicholas
Bayard) and Susanna Livingston (who married John
Kean (1756-1795)); nephew of John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775) and Gilbert
Livingston; uncle by marriage of James
Duane and William
Duer (1747-1799); uncle of Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, Susannah Livingston (who married John
Cleves Symmes), Sarah Van Brugh Livingston (who married John
Jay) and Henry
Brockholst Livingston; grandson of Robert
Livingston the Elder and Pieter
Van Brugh; grandfather of Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873); grandnephew of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724), Johannes
Cuyler and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); granduncle of Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Henry
Walter Livingston, Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843), Rensselaer
Westerlo, Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer and William
Jay; great-grandfather of Julia Kean (who married Hamilton
Fish (1808-1893)); great-granduncle of Philip
Schuyler, Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Edward
Livingston (1796-1840), William
Duer (1805-1879), Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer, Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard and John
Jay II; second great-grandfather of Nicholas
Fish, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936), John
Kean (1852-1914) and Hamilton
Fish Kean; second great-granduncle of Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870); third great-grandfather of Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991) and Robert
Winthrop Kean; third great-granduncle of Herbert
Livingston Satterlee, Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933), Bronson
Murray Cutting, Robert
Reginald Livingston and Brockholst
Livingston; fourth great-grandfather of Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996) and Thomas
Howard Kean; fourth great-granduncle of John
Eliot Thayer Jr.; fifth great-grandfather of Hamilton
Fish (born 1951), Alexa
Fish Ward and Thomas
Howard Kean Jr.; first cousin of Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston and Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775); first cousin once removed of Robert
Livingston the Younger, Cornelis
Cuyler, Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746), John
Cruger Jr., Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), Philip
Van Cortlandt, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr. and Edward
Livingston (1764-1836); first cousin twice removed of David
Davidse Schuyler, Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler and Hamilton
Fish (1808-1893); first cousin thrice removed of Gilbert
Livingston Thompson and John
Jacob Astor III; first cousin four times removed of William
Waldorf Astor and Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright; first cousin five times removed of Guy
Vernor Henry, William
Astor Chanler, Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler, Montgomery
Schuyler Jr., Peter
Goelet Gerry, Helen
Roosevelt Robinson and Ogden
Livingston Mills; second cousin of Stephanus
Bayard, Pierre
Van Cortlandt, Philip
John Schuyler, Philip
P. Schuyler, Stephen
John Schuyler and Henry
Cruger; second cousin once removed of Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792), James
Livingston, Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler and James
Parker; second cousin twice removed of Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Maturin
Livingston, James
Alexander Hamilton, George
Washington Schuyler, John
Cortlandt Parker and Philip
N. Schuyler; second cousin thrice removed of Gerrit
Smith, Elizabeth
Cady Stanton, James
Adams Ekin, Eugene
Schuyler, Richard
Wayne Parker and Charles
Wolcott Parker; second cousin four times removed of Robert
Ray Hamilton, John
Sluyter Wirt, Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer and Karl
Cortlandt Schuyler; second cousin five times removed of Marietta
Peabody Tree and Endicott
Peabody. |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Chapin-Fish
family of New York City, New York; Livingston-Duer
family of New York City, New York (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|
 |
John Cruger Jr. (1710-1791) —
of New York, New York
County, N.Y.
Born July 18,
1710.
Merchant;
mayor
of New York City, N.Y., 1756-66; Speaker
of New York Colonial Assembly, 1769-75.
Died December
27, 1791 (age 81 years, 162
days).
Burial location unknown.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of John
Cruger; nephew of Johannes
Cuyler; uncle of Henry
Cruger; first cousin of Cornelis
Cuyler; first cousin once removed of Robert
Livingston, Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Philip
Livingston and William
Livingston; first cousin twice removed of Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston and Henry
Brockholst Livingston; first cousin thrice removed of Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Henry
Walter Livingston, Rensselaer
Westerlo, Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843), Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, William
Jay and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873); first cousin four times removed of
Philip
Schuyler, Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Edward
Livingston, William
Duer, Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer, Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard and John
Jay II; first cousin five times removed of Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer, Nicholas
Fish, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936), John
Kean, Hamilton
Fish Kean and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870); first cousin six times removed of
Herbert
Livingston Satterlee, Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933), Bronson
Murray Cutting, Robert
Reginald Livingston, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991), Robert
Winthrop Kean and Brockholst
Livingston; first cousin seven times removed of John
Eliot Thayer Jr., Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996) and Thomas
Howard Kean. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also Wikipedia
article |
|  | Image source: New York Public
Library |
|
|
Robert Gilbert Livingston (1712-1789) —
also known as Gilbert Livingston —
of Dutchess
County, N.Y.
Born in Kingston, Ulster
County, N.Y., December
24, 1712.
Member of New York
colonial assembly, 1775-77; member of New York
state assembly from Dutchess County, 1777-78, 1788-89; delegate
to New York convention to ratify U.S. constitution from Dutchess
County, 1788.
Died in Poughkeepsie, Dutchess
County, N.Y., August
27, 1789 (age 76 years, 246
days).
Burial location unknown.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Gilbert
Livingston and Cornelia (Beekman) Livingston; brother of Henry
Gilbert Livingston; married, November
3, 1740, to Catherine McPhaedres; nephew of John
Livingston and Robert
Livingston (1688-1775); uncle of Philip
Van Cortlandt and Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr.; grandson of Robert
Livingston the Elder; grandnephew of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724) and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); granduncle of Hamilton
Fish (1808-1893); great-granduncle of Gilbert
Livingston Thompson, Nicholas
Fish and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936); second great-granduncle of Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991); third great-grandfather of Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright and Montgomery
Schuyler Jr.; third great-granduncle of Guy
Vernor Henry and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996); fourth great-granduncle of Hamilton
Fish (born 1951) and Alexa
Fish Ward; first cousin of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Philip
Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775) and William
Livingston; first cousin once removed of Robert
Livingston the Younger, Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746), Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), Henry
Brockholst Livingston and Edward
Livingston (1764-1836); first cousin twice removed of David
Davidse Schuyler, Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler, Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Henry
Walter Livingston, Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843), Rensselaer
Westerlo, Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, William
Jay and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873); first cousin thrice removed 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; first cousin four times removed of Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer, William
Waldorf Astor, John
Kean, Hamilton
Fish Kean and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870); first cousin five times removed of
Herbert
Livingston Satterlee, William
Astor Chanler, Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler, Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933), Peter
Goelet Gerry, Helen
Roosevelt Robinson, Ogden
Livingston Mills, Bronson
Murray Cutting, Robert
Reginald Livingston, Robert
Winthrop Kean and Brockholst
Livingston; first cousin six times removed of John
Eliot Thayer Jr. and Thomas
Howard Kean; first cousin seven times removed of Thomas
Howard Kean Jr.; second cousin of Stephanus
Bayard, Pierre
Van Cortlandt, Philip
John Schuyler, Philip
P. Schuyler and Stephen
John Schuyler; second cousin once removed of Nicholas
Bayard, Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792), James
Livingston, Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler and James
Parker; second cousin twice removed of Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Maturin
Livingston, James
Alexander Hamilton, George
Washington Schuyler, John
Cortlandt Parker and Philip
N. Schuyler; second cousin thrice removed of Gerrit
Smith, Elizabeth
Cady Stanton, James
Adams Ekin, Eugene
Schuyler, Richard
Wayne Parker and Charles
Wolcott Parker; second cousin four times removed of Robert
Ray Hamilton, John
Sluyter Wirt, Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer and Karl
Cortlandt Schuyler; second cousin five times removed of Marietta
Peabody Tree and Endicott
Peabody. |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Chapin-Fish
family of New York City, New York (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|
|
Francis Lewis (1713-1803) —
of New York.
Born in Llandaff, Wales,
March
21, 1713.
Delegate
to Continental Congress from New York, 1775; signer,
Declaration of Independence, 1776.
Welsh
ancestry.
Died December
30, 1803 (age 90 years, 284
days).
Interment at Trinity
Churchyard, Manhattan, N.Y.; memorial monument at Constitution Gardens, Washington, D.C.
|
|
Henry Gilbert Livingston (1714-1799) —
of Poughkeepsie, Dutchess
County, N.Y.
Born in Kingston, Ulster
County, N.Y., August
27, 1714.
Member of New York
colonial assembly, 1759-68.
Dutch
Reformed.
Died in Poughkeepsie, Dutchess
County, N.Y., February
10, 1799 (age 84 years, 167
days).
Interment at Poughkeepsie
Rural Cemetery, Poughkeepsie, N.Y.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Gilbert
Livingston and Cornelia (Beekman) Livingston; brother of Robert
Gilbert Livingston; married to Susannah Storm Conklin; nephew of
John
Livingston and Robert
Livingston (1688-1775); uncle of Philip
Van Cortlandt and Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr.; grandson of Robert
Livingston the Elder; grandnephew of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724) and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); granduncle of Hamilton
Fish (1808-1893); great-grandfather of Gilbert
Livingston Thompson; great-granduncle of Nicholas
Fish and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936); second great-granduncle of Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991); third great-grandfather of Guy
Vernor Henry; third great-granduncle of Montgomery
Schuyler Jr. and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996); fourth great-granduncle of Hamilton
Fish (born 1951) and Alexa
Fish Ward; first cousin of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Philip
Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775) and William
Livingston; first cousin once removed of Robert
Livingston the Younger, Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746), Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), Henry
Brockholst Livingston and Edward
Livingston (1764-1836); first cousin twice removed of David
Davidse Schuyler, Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler, Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Henry
Walter Livingston, Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843), Rensselaer
Westerlo, Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, William
Jay and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873); first cousin thrice removed 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; first cousin four times removed of Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer, William
Waldorf Astor, John
Kean, Hamilton
Fish Kean and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870); first cousin five times removed of
Herbert
Livingston Satterlee, William
Astor Chanler, Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler, Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933), Peter
Goelet Gerry, Helen
Roosevelt Robinson, Ogden
Livingston Mills, Bronson
Murray Cutting, Robert
Reginald Livingston, Robert
Winthrop Kean and Brockholst
Livingston; first cousin six times removed of John
Eliot Thayer Jr. and Thomas
Howard Kean; first cousin seven times removed of Thomas
Howard Kean Jr.; second cousin of Stephanus
Bayard, Pierre
Van Cortlandt, Philip
John Schuyler, Philip
P. Schuyler and Stephen
John Schuyler; second cousin once removed of Nicholas
Bayard, Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792), James
Livingston, Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler and James
Parker; second cousin twice removed of Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Maturin
Livingston, James
Alexander Hamilton, George
Washington Schuyler, John
Cortlandt Parker and Philip
N. Schuyler; second cousin thrice removed of Gerrit
Smith, Elizabeth
Cady Stanton, James
Adams Ekin, Eugene
Schuyler, Richard
Wayne Parker and Charles
Wolcott Parker; second cousin four times removed of Robert
Ray Hamilton, John
Sluyter Wirt, Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer and Karl
Cortlandt Schuyler; second cousin five times removed of Marietta
Peabody Tree and Endicott
Peabody. |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Chapin-Fish
family of New York City, New York (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
John Stevens (1716-1792) —
of Hunterdon
County, N.J.
Born in Perth Amboy, Middlesex
County, N.J., October
21, 1716.
Delegate
to Continental Congress from New Jersey, 1783; delegate
to New Jersey convention to ratify U.S. constitution from
Hunterdon County, 1787.
Died in Hoboken, Hudson
County, N.J., May 10,
1792 (age 75 years, 202
days).
Interment at Frame
Meeting House Cemetery, Lambertville, N.J.
|
|
Philip Livingston (1716-1778) —
of New York, New York
County, N.Y.
Born in Albany, Albany
County, N.Y., January
15, 1716.
Member of New York
colonial assembly, 1769, 1776; Delegate
to Continental Congress from New York, 1775-78; died in office
1778; signer,
Declaration of Independence, 1776; member of New York
state senate Southern District, 1777-78; died in office 1778.
Presbyterian.
Died while attending the sixth session of the Continental
Congress in York, York
County, Pa., June 12,
1778 (age 62 years, 148
days).
Entombed at Prospect
Hill Cemetery, York, Pa.; memorial monument at Constitution Gardens, Washington, D.C.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Philip Livingston (1686-1749) and Catrina (Van Brugh) Livingston;
brother of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston and William
Livingston; married, April
14, 1740, to Christina Ten Broeck; nephew of John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775) and Gilbert
Livingston; uncle by marriage of James
Duane and William
Duer (1747-1799); uncle of Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, Catherine Livingston (who married Nicholas
Bayard), Susannah Livingston (who married John
Cleves Symmes), Susanna Livingston (who married John
Kean (1756-1795)), Sarah Van Brugh Livingston (who married John
Jay) and Henry
Brockholst Livingston; grandson of Robert
Livingston the Elder and Pieter
Van Brugh; grandfather of Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Rensselaer
Westerlo and Edward
Philip Livingston; grandnephew of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724), Johannes
Cuyler and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); granduncle of Henry
Walter Livingston, Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843), William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, William
Jay and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873); great-grandfather of Philip
Schuyler, Edward
Livingston (1796-1840) and Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer; great-granduncle of Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), William
Duer (1805-1879), Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard and John
Jay II; second great-grandfather of Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer; second great-granduncle of Nicholas
Fish, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936), John
Kean (1852-1914), Hamilton
Fish Kean and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870); third great-grandfather of Robert
Reginald Livingston; third great-granduncle of Herbert
Livingston Satterlee, Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933), Bronson
Murray Cutting, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991), Robert
Winthrop Kean and Brockholst
Livingston; fourth great-grandfather of John
Eliot Thayer Jr.; fourth great-granduncle of Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996) and Thomas
Howard Kean; fifth great-granduncle of Hamilton
Fish (born 1951), Alexa
Fish Ward and Thomas
Howard Kean Jr.; ancestor *** of Robert
Livingston Beeckman; first cousin of Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston and Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775); first cousin once removed of Robert
Livingston the Younger, Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746), Cornelis
Cuyler, John
Cruger Jr., Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), Philip
Van Cortlandt, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr. and Edward
Livingston (1764-1836); first cousin twice removed of David
Davidse Schuyler, Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler and Hamilton
Fish (1808-1893); first cousin thrice removed of Gilbert
Livingston Thompson and John
Jacob Astor III; first cousin four times removed of William
Waldorf Astor and Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright; first cousin five times removed of Guy
Vernor Henry, William
Astor Chanler, Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler, Montgomery
Schuyler Jr., Peter
Goelet Gerry, Helen
Roosevelt Robinson and Ogden
Livingston Mills; second cousin of Stephanus
Bayard, Pierre
Van Cortlandt, Philip
P. Schuyler, Stephen
John Schuyler and Henry
Cruger; second cousin once removed of Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792), James
Livingston, Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler and James
Parker; second cousin twice removed of Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Maturin
Livingston, James
Alexander Hamilton, George
Washington Schuyler, John
Cortlandt Parker and Philip
N. Schuyler; second cousin thrice removed of Gerrit
Smith, Elizabeth
Cady Stanton, James
Adams Ekin, Eugene
Schuyler, Richard
Wayne Parker and Charles
Wolcott Parker; second cousin four times removed of Robert
Ray Hamilton, John
Sluyter Wirt, Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer and Karl
Cortlandt Schuyler; second cousin five times removed of Marietta
Peabody Tree and Endicott
Peabody. |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Livingston-Duer
family of New York City, New York (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Wikipedia article |
|
|
John Armstrong (1717-1795) —
also known as "Hero of Kittanny" —
of Pennsylvania.
Born in Brookeborough, County Fermanagh, Ireland (now Northern
Ireland), October
13, 1717.
Civil
engineer; surveyor;
general in the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War; Delegate
to Continental Congress from Pennsylvania, 1778-80.
Died in Carlisle, Cumberland
County, Pa., March 9,
1795 (age 77 years, 147
days).
Interment at Old
Carlisle Cemetery, Carlisle, Pa.
|
|
Robert R. Livingston (1718-1775) —
of New York.
Born in Clermont, Columbia
County, N.Y., August
1, 1718.
Member of New York
colonial assembly, 1769-74.
Died in Clermont, Columbia
County, N.Y., December
9, 1775 (age 57 years, 130
days).
Burial location unknown.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Robert
Livingston (1688-1775) and Margaret (Howerden) Livingston;
married to Margaret Beekman (granddaughter of Robert
Livingston the Younger (1663-1725)); father of Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), Alida Livingston (who married John
Armstrong Jr.), Margaret Livingston (who married Thomas
Tillotson), Gertrude Livingston (who married Morgan
Lewis) and Edward
Livingston (1764-1836); nephew of John
Livingston and Gilbert
Livingston; grandson of Robert
Livingston the Elder; grandfather of Elizabeth Stevens Livingston
(who married Edward
Philip Livingston (1779-1843)) and Robert
Livingston Tillotson; grandnephew of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724) and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); great-grandfather of John
Jacob Astor III; second great-grandfather of William
Waldorf Astor; third great-grandfather of William
Astor Chanler, Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler, Peter
Goelet Gerry, Helen
Roosevelt Robinson, Ogden
Livingston Mills and Robert
Reginald Livingston; first cousin of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Philip
Livingston and William
Livingston; first cousin once removed of Robert
Livingston the Younger (1663-1725), Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746), Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, Philip
Van Cortlandt, Henry
Brockholst Livingston and Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr.; first cousin twice removed of David
Davidse Schuyler, Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler, Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Henry
Walter Livingston, Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843), Rensselaer
Westerlo, Edward
Philip Livingston (1779-1843), William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, William
Jay, Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873) and Hamilton
Fish (1808-1893); first cousin thrice removed of Philip
Schuyler, Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Gilbert
Livingston Thompson, Edward
Livingston (1796-1840), William
Duer, Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer, Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard, John
Jay II, Nicholas
Fish and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936); first cousin four times removed of Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer, John
Kean, Hamilton
Fish Kean, Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright, Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870) and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991); first cousin five times removed of Guy
Vernor Henry, Herbert
Livingston Satterlee, Montgomery
Schuyler Jr., Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933), Bronson
Murray Cutting, Robert
Winthrop Kean, Brockholst
Livingston and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996); first cousin six times removed of John
Eliot Thayer Jr., Thomas
Howard Kean, Hamilton
Fish (born 1951) and Alexa
Fish Ward; first cousin seven times removed of Thomas
Howard Kean Jr.; second cousin of Stephanus
Bayard, Pierre
Van Cortlandt, Philip
John Schuyler, Philip
P. Schuyler and Stephen
John Schuyler; second cousin once removed of Nicholas
Bayard, Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792), James
Livingston, Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler and James
Parker; second cousin twice removed of Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, James
Alexander Hamilton, George
Washington Schuyler, John
Cortlandt Parker and Philip
N. Schuyler; second cousin thrice removed of Gerrit
Smith, Elizabeth
Cady Stanton, James
Adams Ekin, Eugene
Schuyler, Richard
Wayne Parker and Charles
Wolcott Parker; second cousin four times removed of Robert
Ray Hamilton, John
Sluyter Wirt, Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer and Karl
Cortlandt Schuyler; second cousin five times removed of Marietta
Peabody Tree and Endicott
Peabody. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also Wikipedia article |
|
|
Volkert Petrus Douw (1720-1801) —
also known as Volkert P. Douw —
of Albany, Albany
County, N.Y.
Born in Albany, Albany
County, N.Y., March
23, 1720.
Merchant;
mayor
of Albany, N.Y., 1761-70; member of New York
state senate Western District, 1785-93.
Died in Albany, Albany
County, N.Y., March
20, 1801 (age 80 years, 362
days).
Original interment somewhere
in Rensselaer, N.Y.; reinterment at Albany
Rural Cemetery, Menands, N.Y.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Petrus Douw and Anna (Van Rensselaer) Douw; married, May 20,
1742, to Anna De Peyster; uncle of Leonard
Gansevoort and Leonard
Gansevoort Jr.; granduncle of Peter
Gansevoort; great-grandnephew of Stephanus
Van Cortlandt and Jacobus
Van Cortlandt; first cousin of Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Hendrick
Kiliaen Van Rensselaer and Killian
Killian Van Rensselaer; first cousin once removed of Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer and Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler; first cousin twice removed of James
Alexander Hamilton and Philip
Schuyler; first cousin thrice removed of Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer; first cousin four times removed of Robert
Ray Hamilton; first cousin five times removed of John
Eliot Thayer Jr. and John
Hubner II; second cousin of Philip
P. Schuyler; second cousin once removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Pierre
Van Cortlandt, James
Jay, Philip
John Schuyler, Stephen
John Schuyler, John
Jay, Pieter
Schuyler, Frederick
Jay, Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Stephen
Van Rensselaer and Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer; second cousin twice removed of Henry
Walter Livingston and Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer; second cousin thrice removed of Edward
Livingston, Charles
Pinckney Brown and Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer; second cousin five times removed of Charles
Ludlow Livingston and Bronson
Murray Cutting; third cousin of Nicholas
Bayard, Philip
Van Cortlandt, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., James
Parker, Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843) and William
Jay; third cousin once removed of John
Jay II and John
Cortlandt Parker; third cousin twice removed of James
Adams Ekin, Richard
Wayne Parker and Charles
Wolcott Parker; third cousin thrice removed of John
Sluyter Wirt and Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933). |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; VanRensselaer-Gansevoort
family of Albany, New York (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also Wikipedia
article |
|
|
Peyton Randolph (1721-1775) —
of Virginia.
Born in Williamsburg,
Va., 1721.
Delegate
to Continental Congress from Virginia, 1774-75.
Episcopalian.
Member, Freemasons.
Died in Philadelphia, Philadelphia
County, Pa., October
22, 1775 (age about 54
years).
Interment at College
of William and Mary Chapel, Williamsburg, Va.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of John Randolph and Susanna (Beverley) Randolh; brother-in-law of Benjamin
Harrison; married to Elizabeth 'Betty' Harrison; nephew of Richard
Randolph; uncle of Edmund
Jenings Randolph; granduncle of Peyton
Randolph (1779-1828); great-granduncle of Edmund
Randolph; second great-granduncle of Edmund
Randolph Cocke; third great-granduncle of Francis
Beverley Biddle; first cousin of Richard
Bland; first cousin once removed of Theodorick
Bland, Thomas
Jefferson, Beverley
Randolph and John
Randolph of Roanoke; first cousin twice removed of John
Marshall, Henry
Lee, Charles
Lee, Richard
Bland Lee, James
Markham Marshall, Thomas
Mann Randolph Jr., Alexander
Keith Marshall, Martha
Jefferson Randolph, Edmund
Jennings Lee, Dabney
Carr and Henry
St. George Tucker; first cousin thrice removed of Thomas
Marshall, James
Keith Marshall, Francis
Wayles Eppes, Dabney
Smith Carr, Benjamin
Franklin Randolph, Meriwether
Lewis Randolph, George
Wythe Randolph, Nathaniel
Beverly Tucker, Carter
Henry Harrison and John
Breckinridge Castleman; first cousin four times removed of Thomas
Jefferson Coolidge, Fitzhugh
Lee, William
Henry Fitzhugh Lee, John
Augustine Marshall, Carter
Henry Harrison II and Frederick
Madison Roberts; first cousin five times removed of John
Gardner Coolidge, Edith
Wilson, William
Marshall Bullitt and Alexander
Scott Bullitt; first cousin six times removed of William
Welby Beverley; first cousin seven times removed of Lee
Marvin; second cousin twice removed of John
Wayles Eppes; second cousin thrice removed of Coleby
Chew; second cousin four times removed of St.
Clair Ballard, Lewis
Ballard and William
Henry Robertson; second cousin five times removed of Elliot
Woolfolk Major and Edgar
Bailey Woolfolk. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | Randolph County,
N.C. is named for him. |
|  | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — NNDB
dossier |
|
|
Pierre Van Cortlandt (1721-1814) —
of New York.
Born in Westchester
County, N.Y., January
10, 1721.
Served in the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War; member
of New
York state senate Southern District, 1777-78; Lieutenant
Governor of New York, 1778-95.
Died in Westchester
County, N.Y., May 1,
1814 (age 93 years, 111
days).
Original interment at a
private or family graveyard, Westchester County, N.Y.;
reinterment at Hillside
Cemetery, Cortlandt town, Westchester County, N.Y.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Philip Van Cortlandt (1683-1748) and Catherine (DePeyster) Van
Cortlandt; married, May 29,
1748, to Joanna Livingston (daughter of Gilbert
Livingston); father of Philip
Van Cortlandt (1749-1831), Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr. and Anne De Peyster Van Cortlandt (who married
Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer); grandson of Stephanus
Van Cortlandt and Abraham
de Peyster; grandnephew of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724), Jacobus
Van Cortlandt, Johannes
de Peyster and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); first cousin of Stephanus
Bayard, Philip
John Schuyler and Stephen
John Schuyler; first cousin once removed of John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775), Johannes
DePeyster, Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746), Nicholas
Bayard, Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792), Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler and James
Parker; first cousin twice removed of David
Davidse Schuyler, Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler, Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Henry
Walter Livingston, Philip
Schuyler, James
Alexander Hamilton and John
Cortlandt Parker; first cousin thrice removed of Edward
Livingston (1796-1840), Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer, James
Adams Ekin, Richard
Wayne Parker and Charles
Wolcott Parker; first cousin four times removed of Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Ray Hamilton and John
Sluyter Wirt; first cousin five times removed of Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870), John
Eliot Thayer Jr., Bronson
Murray Cutting, Marietta
Peabody Tree and Endicott
Peabody; first cousin six times removed of Brockholst
Livingston; second cousin of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Philip
Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775), William
Livingston, James
Jay, Matthew
Clarkson, Philip
P. Schuyler, Henry
Rutgers, John
Jay and Frederick
Jay; second cousin once removed of Volkert
Petrus Douw, Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, Hendrick
Kiliaen Van Rensselaer, Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), James
Livingston, John
Stevens III, Henry
Brockholst Livingston, Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Killian
Killian Van Rensselaer, Edward
Livingston (1764-1836), Philip
DePeyster, Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843) and William
Jay; second cousin twice removed of Leonard
Gansevoort, Leonard
Gansevoort Jr., Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Maturin
Livingston, Rensselaer
Westerlo, Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873), Hamilton
Fish, George
Washington Schuyler, John
Jay II and Philip
N. Schuyler; second cousin thrice removed of Peter
Gansevoort, Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Gilbert
Livingston Thompson, Gerrit
Smith, William
Duer, Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard, Elizabeth
Cady Stanton, John
Jacob Astor III, Eugene
Schuyler, Nicholas
Fish and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936); second cousin four times removed of William
Waldorf Astor, John
Kean, Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Hamilton
Fish Kean, Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright, Karl
Cortlandt Schuyler, Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933) and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991); second cousin five times removed of Guy
Vernor Henry, Herbert
Livingston Satterlee, William
Astor Chanler, Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler, Montgomery
Schuyler Jr., Peter
Goelet Gerry, Helen
Roosevelt Robinson, Ogden
Livingston Mills, Robert
Reginald Livingston, Robert
Winthrop Kean and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996). |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Parker-Schuyler
family of Perth Amboy, New Jersey (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | Cortland County,
N.Y. is named for him. |
|  | The city
of Cortland,
New York, is named for
him. |
|  | See also Wikipedia
article — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Archibald Cary (1721-1787) —
also known as "Old Iron" —
Born in Chesterfield
County, Va., January
24, 1721.
Planter;
iron foundry
business; member of Virginia
House of Burgesses, 1756-76.
Died in Chesterfield
County, Va., February
26, 1787 (age 66 years, 33
days).
Burial location unknown.
|
|
William Livingston (1723-1790) —
of Elizabethtown, Essex County (now Elizabeth, Union
County), N.J.
Born in Albany, Albany
County, N.Y., November
30, 1723.
Lawyer;
member of New York
colonial assembly, 1759-61; Delegate
to Continental Congress from New Jersey, 1774-76; Governor of
New Jersey, 1776-90; died in office 1790; chancellor
of New Jersey court of chancery, 1776-90; died in office 1790; member,
U.S. Constitutional Convention, 1787.
Presbyterian.
Died in Elizabethtown, Essex County (now Elizabeth, Union
County), N.J., July 25,
1790 (age 66 years, 237
days).
Originally entombed at Trinity
Churchyard, Manhattan, N.Y.; re-entombed in 1846 at Green-Wood
Cemetery, Brooklyn, N.Y.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Philip Livingston (1686-1749) and Catherine (Van Brugh)
Livingston; brother of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston and Philip
Livingston (1716-1778); married 1745 to
Susannah French (granddaughter of Phillip
French); father of Susannah Livingston (who married John
Cleves Symmes), Sarah Van Brugh Livingston (who married John
Jay) and Henry
Brockholst Livingston; nephew of John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775) and Gilbert
Livingston; uncle by marriage of James
Duane and William
Duer (1747-1799); uncle of Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, Catherine Livingston (who married Nicholas
Bayard) and Susanna Livingston (who married John
Kean (1756-1795)); grandson of Robert
Livingston the Elder and Pieter
Van Brugh; grandfather of Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843) and William
Jay; grandnephew of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724), Johannes
Cuyler and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); granduncle of Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Henry
Walter Livingston, Rensselaer
Westerlo, Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873); great-grandfather of Henry
Brockholst Ledyard and John
Jay II; great-granduncle of Philip
Schuyler, Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Edward
Livingston (1796-1840), William
Duer (1805-1879), Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer and Denning
Duer; second great-grandfather of Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870); second great-granduncle of Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer, Nicholas
Fish, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936), John
Kean (1852-1914) and Hamilton
Fish Kean; third great-grandfather of Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933) and Brockholst
Livingston; third great-granduncle of Herbert
Livingston Satterlee, Bronson
Murray Cutting, Robert
Reginald Livingston, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991) and Robert
Winthrop Kean; fourth great-granduncle of John
Eliot Thayer Jr., Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996) and Thomas
Howard Kean; fifth great-granduncle of Hamilton
Fish (born 1951), Alexa
Fish Ward and Thomas
Howard Kean Jr.; first cousin of Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston and Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775); first cousin once removed of Robert
Livingston the Younger, Cornelis
Cuyler, Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746), John
Cruger Jr., Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), Philip
Van Cortlandt, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr. and Edward
Livingston (1764-1836); first cousin twice removed of David
Davidse Schuyler, Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler and Hamilton
Fish (1808-1893); first cousin thrice removed of Gilbert
Livingston Thompson and John
Jacob Astor III; first cousin four times removed of William
Waldorf Astor and Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright; first cousin five times removed of Guy
Vernor Henry, William
Astor Chanler, Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler, Montgomery
Schuyler Jr., Peter
Goelet Gerry, Helen
Roosevelt Robinson and Ogden
Livingston Mills; second cousin of Stephanus
Bayard, Pierre
Van Cortlandt, Philip
John Schuyler, Philip
P. Schuyler, Stephen
John Schuyler and Henry
Cruger; second cousin once removed of Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792), James
Livingston, Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler and James
Parker; second cousin twice removed of Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Maturin
Livingston, James
Alexander Hamilton, George
Washington Schuyler, John
Cortlandt Parker and Philip
N. Schuyler; second cousin thrice removed of Gerrit
Smith, Elizabeth
Cady Stanton, James
Adams Ekin, Eugene
Schuyler, Richard
Wayne Parker and Charles
Wolcott Parker; second cousin four times removed of Robert
Ray Hamilton, John
Sluyter Wirt, Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer and Karl
Cortlandt Schuyler; second cousin five times removed of Marietta
Peabody Tree and Endicott
Peabody. |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Livingston-Duer
family of New York City, New York (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — National
Governors Association biography |
|
|
Benjamin Harrison (1726-1791) —
also known as "The Signer" —
of Charles
City County, Va.
Born in Charles
City County, Va., April 5,
1726.
Planter;
member of Virginia
House of Burgesses, 1749-75; Delegate
to Continental Congress from Virginia, 1774-77; signer,
Declaration of Independence, 1776; member of Virginia
state house of delegates, 1776-81, 1787-91; Speaker of
the Virginia State House of Delegates, 1778-81; Governor of
Virginia, 1781-84; delegate
to Virginia convention to ratify U.S. constitution from Charles
City County, 1788.
Died in Charles
City County, Va., April
24, 1791 (age 65 years, 19
days).
Interment at Berkeley
Plantation, Charles City County, Va.; memorial monument at Constitution Gardens, Washington, D.C.
|
|
Robert Carter Nicholas (1729-1780) —
Born in Hanover
County, Va., January
28, 1729.
Lawyer;
member of Virginia
House of Burgesses, 1755-61, 1766-75.
Died in Hanover
County, Va., November, 1780
(age 51
years, 0 days).
Interment a
private or family graveyard, Hanover County, Va.
|
|
Daniel Carroll (1730-1796) —
of Maryland.
Born in Upper Marlboro, Prince
George's County, Md., July 22,
1730.
Member of Maryland
state senate, 1781-90; Delegate
to Continental Congress from Maryland, 1781-83; signer,
Articles of Confederation, 1781; member,
U.S. Constitutional Convention, 1787; U.S.
Representative from Maryland at-large, 1789-91.
Catholic.
Member, Freemasons.
Slaveowner.
Died in Rock Creek, Montgomery
County, Md., May 7,
1796 (age 65 years, 290
days).
Interment at St.
John's Catholic Cemetery, Forest Glen, Md.
|
|
James Jay (1732-1815) —
also known as "Sir James Jay" —
of New York.
Born in New York, New York
County, N.Y., October
16, 1732.
Physician;
member of New York
state senate Southern District, 1778-82.
French
Huguenot and Dutch
ancestry.
Knighted by King George III, 1763.
Died October
20, 1815 (age 83 years, 4
days).
Interment at Jay
Family Cemetery, Rye, N.Y.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Pierre 'Peter' Jay and Mary (Van Cortlandt) Jay; brother of John
Jay and Frederick
Jay; uncle of Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843) and William
Jay; grandson of Jacobus
Van Cortlandt; grandnephew of Stephanus
Van Cortlandt; granduncle of John
Jay II; second great-granduncle of Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933); second cousin of Stephanus
Bayard, Pierre
Van Cortlandt, Philip
John Schuyler and Stephen
John Schuyler; second cousin once removed of Volkert
Petrus Douw, Nicholas
Bayard, Philip
P. Schuyler, Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Hendrick
Kiliaen Van Rensselaer, Pieter
Schuyler, Philip
Van Cortlandt, Henry
Brockholst Livingston, Matthew
Clarkson, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., Killian
Killian Van Rensselaer, Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler, James
Parker and Hamilton
Fish (1808-1893); second cousin twice removed of Leonard
Gansevoort, Leonard
Gansevoort Jr., Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Henry
Walter Livingston, James
Alexander Hamilton, Philip
Schuyler, John
Cortlandt Parker, Nicholas
Fish and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936); second cousin thrice removed of Peter
Gansevoort, Edward
Livingston, Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard, James
Adams Ekin, Richard
Wayne Parker, Charles
Wolcott Parker, Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991); second cousin four times removed of Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Ray Hamilton, John
Sluyter Wirt, Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Charles
Ludlow Livingston and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996); second cousin five times removed of John
Eliot Thayer Jr., Bronson
Murray Cutting, Brockholst
Livingston, Marietta
Peabody Tree, Endicott
Peabody, Hamilton
Fish (born 1951) and Alexa
Fish Ward. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also Wikipedia
article — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
 |
Philip John Schuyler (1733-1804) —
also known as Philip Schuyler —
of New York.
Born in Albany, Albany
County, N.Y., November
20, 1733.
Member of New York
colonial assembly, 1768; Delegate
to Continental Congress from New York, 1775, 1777, 1779-80;
general in the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War; member
of New
York state senate Western District, 1780-84, 1785-89, 1791-97;
member of New York
council of appointment, 1786, 1788, 1790, 1794; U.S.
Senator from New York, 1789-91, 1797-98.
Built the first flax mill
in America.
Slaveowner.
Died in Albany, Albany
County, N.Y., November
18, 1804 (age 70 years, 364
days).
Original interment at a private or family graveyard, Albany County, N.Y.; reinterment
at Albany
Rural Cemetery, Menands, N.Y.; statue (now gone) at Albany
City Hall Grounds, Albany, N.Y.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746) and Cornelia (Van Cortlandt) Schuyler;
brother of Stephen
John Schuyler; married, September
17, 1755, to Catherine Van Rensselaer; father of Elizabeth
Schuyler (who married Alexander
Hamilton), Margarita Schuyler (who married Stephen
Van Rensselaer) and Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler; uncle of Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792); grandson of Stephanus
Van Cortlandt and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); grandfather of Philip
Schuyler, James
Alexander Hamilton and William
Stephen Hamilton; grandnephew of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724) and Jacobus
Van Cortlandt; granduncle of Henry
Walter Livingston; great-granduncle of Edward
Livingston (1796-1840); second great-grandfather of Robert
Ray Hamilton; third great-grandfather of John
Eliot Thayer Jr.; third great-granduncle of Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870) and Bronson
Murray Cutting; fourth great-granduncle of Brockholst
Livingston; first cousin of Stephanus
Bayard and Pierre
Van Cortlandt; first cousin once removed of John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775), Gilbert
Livingston, Nicholas
Bayard, Philip
Van Cortlandt, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr. and James
Parker; first cousin twice removed of David
Davidse Schuyler, Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer and John
Cortlandt Parker; first cousin thrice removed of Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer, James
Adams Ekin, Richard
Wayne Parker and Charles
Wolcott Parker; first cousin four times removed of Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer and John
Sluyter Wirt; first cousin five times removed of Marietta
Peabody Tree and Endicott
Peabody; second cousin of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775), William
Livingston, James
Jay, Philip
P. Schuyler, John
Jay and Frederick
Jay; second cousin once removed of Volkert
Petrus Douw, Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, Hendrick
Kiliaen Van Rensselaer, Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), James
Livingston, Henry
Brockholst Livingston, Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Killian
Killian Van Rensselaer, Edward
Livingston (1764-1836), Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843) and William
Jay; second cousin twice removed of Leonard
Gansevoort, Leonard
Gansevoort Jr., Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Maturin
Livingston, Rensselaer
Westerlo, Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873), Hamilton
Fish, George
Washington Schuyler, John
Jay II and Philip
N. Schuyler; second cousin thrice removed of Peter
Gansevoort, Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Gilbert
Livingston Thompson, Gerrit
Smith, William
Duer, Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard, Elizabeth
Cady Stanton, John
Jacob Astor III, Eugene
Schuyler, Nicholas
Fish and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936); second cousin four times removed of William
Waldorf Astor, John
Kean, Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Hamilton
Fish Kean, Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright, Karl
Cortlandt Schuyler, Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933) and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991); second cousin five times removed of Guy
Vernor Henry, Herbert
Livingston Satterlee, William
Astor Chanler, Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler, Montgomery
Schuyler Jr., Peter
Goelet Gerry, Helen
Roosevelt Robinson, Ogden
Livingston Mills, Robert
Reginald Livingston, Robert
Winthrop Kean and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996). |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Schuyler
family of Albany, New York; Parker-Schuyler
family of Perth Amboy, New Jersey (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | Schuyler counties in Ill., Mo. and N.Y. are
named for him. |
|  | The village
of Schuylerville,
New York, is named for
him. |
|  | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Wikipedia article — NNDB
dossier |
|  | Image source: New York Public
Library |
|
|
James Duane (1733-1797) —
of New York, New York
County, N.Y.
Born in New York, New York
County, N.Y., February
6, 1733.
Delegate
to Continental Congress from New York, 1774-83; member of New York
state senate Southern District, 1782-85, 1787-90; mayor
of New York City, N.Y., 1784-89; delegate
to New York convention to ratify U.S. constitution from New York
County, 1788; U.S.
District Judge for New York, 1790-94.
Died February
1, 1797 (age 63 years, 361
days).
Interment at Christ
Episcopal Church, Duanesburg, N.Y.
|
|
Matthew Clarkson (1733-1800) —
of Philadelphia, Philadelphia
County, Pa.
Born in New York, New York
County, N.Y., April, 1733.
Delegate
to Continental Congress from Pennsylvania, 1785; mayor
of Philadelphia, Pa., 1792-96.
Died in Philadelphia, Philadelphia
County, Pa., October
5, 1800 (age 67 years, 0
days).
Interment at Christ
Church Burial Ground, Philadelphia, Pa.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Cornelia (DePeyster) Clarkson and Matthew Clarkson (1699-1739);
married, June 13,
1753, to Mary Boude; nephew of Johannes
DePeyster; grandson of Johannes
de Peyster; grandnephew of Abraham
de Peyster; first cousin of Henry
Rutgers; first cousin once removed of Matthew
Clarkson (1758-1825) and Philip
DePeyster; first cousin five times removed of Peter
Augustus Jay; second cousin of Pierre
Van Cortlandt; second cousin once removed of Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Peter Livingston, James
Livingston, John
Stevens III, Philip
Van Cortlandt and Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr.; second cousin twice removed of Robert
R. Livingston, Edward
Livingston, Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler, Maturin
Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, Peter
Gansevoort and Charles
Ludlow Livingston; second cousin thrice removed of Philip
Schuyler, James
Alexander Hamilton, Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Gerrit
Smith, William
Duer, Denning
Duer and Elizabeth
Cady Stanton; second cousin four times removed of John
Jacob Astor III, Nicholas
Fish, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936), John
Kean, Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer and Hamilton
Fish Kean; second cousin five times removed of William
Waldorf Astor, Robert
Ray Hamilton, Peter
Goelet Gerry, Ogden
Livingston Mills, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991), Robert
Reginald Livingston and Robert
Winthrop Kean. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Wikipedia article — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Robert Morris (1734-1806) —
of Pennsylvania.
Born in Liverpool, England,
January
31, 1734.
Delegate
to Continental Congress from Pennsylvania, 1776; signer,
Declaration of Independence, 1776; member of Pennsylvania
state house of representatives, 1785; member,
U.S. Constitutional Convention, 1787; U.S.
Senator from Pennsylvania, 1789-95.
Episcopalian.
English
ancestry.
Financier of the American Revolution, but went broke in the process.
Imprisoned
for debt from
February 1798 to August 1801.
Slaveowner.
Died in Philadelphia, Philadelphia
County, Pa., May 8,
1806 (age 72 years, 97
days).
Entombed at Christ
Church Burial Ground, Philadelphia, Pa.; statue at Independence
National Historical Park, Philadelphia, Pa.; memorial monument at
Constitution Gardens, Washington, D.C.
|
|
Nicholas Bayard (1736-1802) —
of New York, New York
County, N.Y.
Born in Albany, Albany
County, N.Y., September
14, 1736.
Member of New York
state assembly from New York County, 1786-88.
Died in New York, New York
County, N.Y., February
25, 1802 (age 65 years, 164
days).
Burial location unknown.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Nicholas Bayard (1698-1765) and Elizabeth (Mynders) Bayard;
married to Catherine Livingston (daughter of Peter
Van Brugh Livingston; sister-in-law of John
Kean (1756-1795); sister of Philip
Peter Livingston; niece of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Philip
Livingston and William
Livingston; aunt of Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873); first cousin of Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston and Henry
Brockholst Livingston); nephew of Stephanus
Bayard; great-grandson of Jacob
Leisler, Stephanus
Van Cortlandt and Nicholas
Bayard (c.1644-1707); great-grandnephew of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724), Jacobus
Van Cortlandt and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); second great-grandfather of Mary McIntosh
(who married DeWitt
Clinton Cole); second great-grandnephew of Pieter
Stuyvesant; first cousin once removed of Pierre
Van Cortlandt, Philip
John Schuyler and Stephen
John Schuyler; first cousin twice removed of John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775), Gilbert
Livingston, Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746) and James
Adams Ekin; first cousin thrice removed of David
Davidse Schuyler, Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler and John
Sluyter Wirt; first cousin five times removed of John
Eliot Thayer Jr. and Bronson
Murray Cutting; second cousin of Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792), Philip
Van Cortlandt, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler and James
Parker; second cousin once removed of Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775), James
Jay, Philip
P. Schuyler, John
Jay, Frederick
Jay, Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Henry
Walter Livingston, James
Alexander Hamilton, Philip
Schuyler and John
Cortlandt Parker; second cousin twice removed of Edward
Livingston (1796-1840), Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer, Richard
Wayne Parker and Charles
Wolcott Parker; second cousin thrice removed of Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer and Robert
Ray Hamilton; second cousin four times removed of Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870), Marietta
Peabody Tree and Endicott
Peabody; second cousin five times removed of Brockholst
Livingston; third cousin of Volkert
Petrus Douw, Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, John
Bubenheim Bayard, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Hendrick
Kiliaen Van Rensselaer, Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), James
Livingston, Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Killian
Killian Van Rensselaer, Edward
Livingston (1764-1836), Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843) and William
Jay; third cousin once removed of Leonard
Gansevoort, Leonard
Gansevoort Jr., Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, James
Asheton Bayard Sr., Maturin
Livingston, Rensselaer
Westerlo, Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, Hamilton
Fish, George
Washington Schuyler, John
Jay II and Philip
N. Schuyler; third cousin twice removed of Peter
Gansevoort, Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Gilbert
Livingston Thompson, Richard
Henry Bayard, Littleton
Kirkpatrick, Gerrit
Smith, James
Asheton Bayard Jr., William
Duer, Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard, Elizabeth
Cady Stanton, John
Jacob Astor III, Eugene
Schuyler, Nicholas
Fish and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936); third cousin thrice removed of Thomas
Francis Bayard Sr., Andrew
Kirkpatrick, William
Waldorf Astor, John
Kean (1852-1914), Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Hamilton
Fish Kean, Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright, Karl
Cortlandt Schuyler, Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933) and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991). |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; DuPont-Bayard
family of Wilmington, Delaware (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|
|
Philip P. Schuyler (1736-1808) —
of Albany
County, N.Y.
Born in 1736.
Member of New York
state assembly from Albany County, 1796-99.
Died in Albany, Albany
County, N.Y., June 3,
1808 (age about 71
years).
Burial location unknown.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Pieter Schuyler (1696-1753) and Catharina (Groesbeck) Schuyler;
married, April
21, 1765, to Ariaantje Wendell; uncle of Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792) and Peter
Samuel Schuyler; grandson of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724); grandnephew of Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); granduncle of Henry
Walter Livingston; great-grandnephew of Stephanus
Van Cortlandt and Jacobus
Van Cortlandt; great-granduncle of Edward
Livingston (1796-1840); third great-granduncle of Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870) and Bronson
Murray Cutting; fourth great-granduncle of Brockholst
Livingston; first cousin once removed of John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775), Gilbert
Livingston, Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746), Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, James
Livingston, Stephen
Van Rensselaer and Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer; first cousin twice removed of David
Davidse Schuyler, Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler, Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), Edward
Livingston (1764-1836), Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler, Maturin
Livingston, Philip
Schuyler and Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer; first cousin thrice removed of James
Alexander Hamilton, Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Gerrit
Smith, Elizabeth
Cady Stanton and Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer; first cousin four times removed of John
Jacob Astor III and Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer; first cousin five times removed of William
Waldorf Astor, Robert
Ray Hamilton, Peter
Goelet Gerry, Ogden
Livingston Mills and John
Eliot Thayer Jr.; first cousin six times removed of William
Astor Chanler, Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler, Helen
Roosevelt Robinson and Robert
Reginald Livingston; second cousin of Stephanus
Bayard, Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Philip
Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775), Volkert
Petrus Douw, Pierre
Van Cortlandt, William
Livingston, Philip
John Schuyler, Stephen
John Schuyler, Hendrick
Kiliaen Van Rensselaer and Killian
Killian Van Rensselaer; second cousin once removed of James
Jay, Nicholas
Bayard, Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, John
Jay, Frederick
Jay, Philip
Van Cortlandt, Leonard
Gansevoort, Leonard
Gansevoort Jr., Henry
Brockholst Livingston, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr. and James
Parker; second cousin twice removed of Rensselaer
Westerlo, Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, Peter
Gansevoort, Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873), Hamilton
Fish, George
Washington Schuyler, John
Cortlandt Parker and Philip
N. Schuyler; second cousin thrice removed of Gilbert
Livingston Thompson, William
Duer, Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard, John
Jay II, James
Adams Ekin, Eugene
Schuyler, Richard
Wayne Parker, Nicholas
Fish, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936) and Charles
Wolcott Parker; second cousin four times removed of John
Sluyter Wirt, John
Kean, Hamilton
Fish Kean, Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright, Karl
Cortlandt Schuyler and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991); second cousin five times removed of Guy
Vernor Henry, Herbert
Livingston Satterlee, Montgomery
Schuyler Jr., Robert
Winthrop Kean, John
Hubner II, Marietta
Peabody Tree, Endicott
Peabody and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996); third cousin of Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843) and William
Jay; third cousin thrice removed of Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933). |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Schuyler
family of Albany, New York (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|
|
Stephen John Schuyler (1737-1820) —
also known as Stephen J. Schuyler —
of Albany
County, N.Y.
Born in Troy, Rensselaer
County, N.Y., April
14, 1737.
Member of New York
state assembly from Albany County, 1777-79.
Died in Albany, Albany
County, N.Y., December
14, 1820 (age 83 years, 244
days).
Original interment somewhere in Troy, N.Y.; reinterment at Albany
Rural Cemetery, Menands, N.Y.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746) and Cornelia (Van Cortlandt) Schuyler;
brother of Philip
John Schuyler; married to Helena Ten Eyck; uncle of Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792) and Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler; grandson of Stephanus
Van Cortlandt and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); grandnephew of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724) and Jacobus
Van Cortlandt; granduncle of Henry
Walter Livingston, Philip
Schuyler and James
Alexander Hamilton; great-granduncle of Edward
Livingston (1796-1840); second great-granduncle of Robert
Ray Hamilton; third great-granduncle of Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870), John
Eliot Thayer Jr. and Bronson
Murray Cutting; fourth great-granduncle of Brockholst
Livingston; first cousin of Stephanus
Bayard and Pierre
Van Cortlandt; first cousin once removed of John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775), Gilbert
Livingston, Nicholas
Bayard, Philip
Van Cortlandt, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr. and James
Parker; first cousin twice removed of David
Davidse Schuyler, Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler, Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer and John
Cortlandt Parker; first cousin thrice removed of Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer, James
Adams Ekin, Richard
Wayne Parker and Charles
Wolcott Parker; first cousin four times removed of Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer and John
Sluyter Wirt; first cousin five times removed of Marietta
Peabody Tree and Endicott
Peabody; second cousin of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Philip
Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775), William
Livingston, James
Jay, Philip
P. Schuyler, John
Jay and Frederick
Jay; second cousin once removed of Volkert
Petrus Douw, Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, Hendrick
Kiliaen Van Rensselaer, Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), James
Livingston, Henry
Brockholst Livingston, Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Killian
Killian Van Rensselaer, Edward
Livingston (1764-1836), Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843) and William
Jay; second cousin twice removed of Leonard
Gansevoort, Leonard
Gansevoort Jr., Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Maturin
Livingston, Rensselaer
Westerlo, Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873), Hamilton
Fish, George
Washington Schuyler, John
Jay II and Philip
N. Schuyler; second cousin thrice removed of Peter
Gansevoort, Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Gilbert
Livingston Thompson, Gerrit
Smith, William
Duer, Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard, Elizabeth
Cady Stanton, John
Jacob Astor III, Eugene
Schuyler, Nicholas
Fish and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936); second cousin four times removed of William
Waldorf Astor, John
Kean, Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Hamilton
Fish Kean, Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright, Karl
Cortlandt Schuyler, Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933) and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991); second cousin five times removed of Guy
Vernor Henry, Herbert
Livingston Satterlee, William
Astor Chanler, Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler, Montgomery
Schuyler Jr., Peter
Goelet Gerry, Helen
Roosevelt Robinson, Ogden
Livingston Mills, Robert
Reginald Livingston, Robert
Winthrop Kean and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996). |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Schuyler
family of Albany, New York; Parker-Schuyler
family of Perth Amboy, New Jersey (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Peter Robert Livingston (1737-1794) —
also known as Peter R. Livingston —
of Albany
County, N.Y.
Born in New York, April
27, 1737.
Member of New York
colonial assembly, 1761-69, 1774-76; member of New York
state assembly from Albany County, 1780-81.
Died in New York, November
13, 1794 (age 57 years, 200
days).
Burial location unknown.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790) and Maria (Thong) Livingston;
brother-in-law of James
Duane; brother of Walter
Livingston; nephew of Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Philip
Livingston and William
Livingston; uncle of Henry
Walter Livingston; grandfather of Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859); grandnephew of John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775) and Gilbert
Livingston; granduncle of Edward
Livingston (1796-1840); great-grandson of Robert
Livingston the Elder and Pieter
Van Brugh; great-grandnephew of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724), Johannes
Cuyler and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); second great-granduncle of Herbert
Livingston Satterlee, Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870) and Bronson
Murray Cutting; third great-granduncle of Brockholst
Livingston; first cousin by marriage of William
Duer (1747-1799); first cousin of Philip
Peter Livingston, Catherine Livingston (who married Nicholas
Bayard), Susannah Livingston (who married John
Cleves Symmes), Susanna Livingston (who married John
Kean (1756-1795)), Sarah Van Brugh Livingston (who married John
Jay) and Henry
Brockholst Livingston; first cousin once removed of Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775), Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843), Rensselaer
Westerlo, Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, William
Jay and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873); first cousin twice removed of Robert
Livingston the Younger, Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746), Cornelis
Cuyler, John
Cruger Jr., Philip
Schuyler, William
Duer (1805-1879), Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer, Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard and John
Jay II; first cousin thrice removed of David
Davidse Schuyler, Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler, Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer, Nicholas
Fish, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936), John
Kean (1852-1914) and Hamilton
Fish Kean; first cousin four times removed of Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933), Robert
Reginald Livingston, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991) and Robert
Winthrop Kean; first cousin five times removed of John
Eliot Thayer Jr., Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996) and Thomas
Howard Kean; first cousin six times removed of Hamilton
Fish (born 1951), Alexa
Fish Ward and Thomas
Howard Kean Jr.; second cousin of Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), Philip
Van Cortlandt, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr. and Edward
Livingston (1764-1836); second cousin once removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Pierre
Van Cortlandt, Philip
John Schuyler, Philip
P. Schuyler, Stephen
John Schuyler, Henry
Cruger and Hamilton
Fish (1808-1893); second cousin twice removed of Gilbert
Livingston Thompson and John
Jacob Astor III; second cousin thrice removed of William
Waldorf Astor and Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright; second cousin four times removed of Guy
Vernor Henry, William
Astor Chanler, Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler, Montgomery
Schuyler Jr., Peter
Goelet Gerry, Helen
Roosevelt Robinson and Ogden
Livingston Mills; third cousin of Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792), James
Livingston, Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler and James
Parker; third cousin once removed of Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Maturin
Livingston, James
Alexander Hamilton, George
Washington Schuyler, John
Cortlandt Parker and Philip
N. Schuyler; third cousin twice removed of Gerrit
Smith, Elizabeth
Cady Stanton, James
Adams Ekin, Eugene
Schuyler, Richard
Wayne Parker and Charles
Wolcott Parker; third cousin thrice removed of Robert
Ray Hamilton, John
Sluyter Wirt, Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer and Karl
Cortlandt Schuyler. |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Livingston-Duer
family of New York City, New York (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|
|
Jeremiah Van Rensselaer (1738-1810) —
of Albany, Albany
County, N.Y.
Born in Watervliet, Albany
County, N.Y., August
27, 1738.
Democrat. Merchant;
surveyor;
served in the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War; member
of New York
state assembly from Albany County, 1788-89; U.S.
Representative from New York 6th District, 1789-91; Presidential
Elector for New York, 1800;
Lieutenant
Governor of New York, 1801-04.
Slaveowner.
Died in Albany, Albany
County, N.Y., February
19, 1810 (age 71 years, 176
days).
Original interment at Dutch
Reformed Cemetery, Albany, N.Y.; reinterment at Albany
Rural Cemetery, Menands, N.Y.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Engeltie 'Angelica' (Livingston) Van Rensselaer and Johannes Van
Rensselaer; brother of Robert
Van Rensselaer; married, July 3,
1760, to Judith Bayard; married 1764 to Helena
Lansing; father of Solomon
Van Vechten Van Rensselaer; uncle of Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer and Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler; grandson of Robert
Livingston the Younger; granduncle of James
Alexander Hamilton and Philip
Schuyler; great-grandson of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724); great-grandnephew of Stephanus
Van Cortlandt, Robert
Livingston the Elder, Jacobus
Van Cortlandt and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); great-granduncle of Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer; second great-granduncle of Robert
Ray Hamilton; third great-granduncle of John
Eliot Thayer Jr.; first cousin of Volkert
Petrus Douw, Hendrick
Kiliaen Van Rensselaer, James
Livingston and Killian
Killian Van Rensselaer; first cousin once removed of Philip
P. Schuyler, Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), Leonard
Gansevoort, Leonard
Gansevoort Jr., Edward
Livingston (1764-1836), Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847) and Maturin
Livingston; first cousin twice removed of John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775), Gilbert
Livingston, Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746), Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Peter
Gansevoort, Gerrit
Smith and Elizabeth
Cady Stanton; first cousin thrice removed of David
Davidse Schuyler, Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler and John
Jacob Astor III; first cousin four times removed of William
Waldorf Astor, Peter
Goelet Gerry and Ogden
Livingston Mills; first cousin five times removed of William
Astor Chanler, Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler, Helen
Roosevelt Robinson, Robert
Reginald Livingston and John
Hubner II; second cousin of Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792) and Peter
Samuel Schuyler; second cousin once removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Philip
Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775), Pierre
Van Cortlandt, William
Livingston, James
Jay, Philip
John Schuyler, Matthew
Clarkson (1733-1800), Stephen
John Schuyler, John
Jay, Frederick
Jay, Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer and Henry
Walter Livingston; second cousin twice removed of Edward
Livingston (1796-1840) and Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer; second cousin thrice removed of Charles
Pinckney Brown and Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer; second cousin four times removed of Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870) and Bronson
Murray Cutting; second cousin five times removed of Brockholst
Livingston; third cousin of Nicholas
Bayard, Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, Philip
Van Cortlandt, Henry
Brockholst Livingston, Matthew
Clarkson (1758-1825), Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., James
Parker, Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843) and William
Jay; third cousin once removed of Rensselaer
Westerlo, Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873), Hamilton
Fish, George
Washington Schuyler, John
Jay II, John
Cortlandt Parker and Philip
N. Schuyler; third cousin twice removed of Gilbert
Livingston Thompson, William
Duer, Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard, James
Adams Ekin, Eugene
Schuyler, Richard
Wayne Parker, Nicholas
Fish, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936) and Charles
Wolcott Parker; third cousin thrice removed of John
Sluyter Wirt, John
Kean, Hamilton
Fish Kean, Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright, Karl
Cortlandt Schuyler, Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933) and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991). |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; VanRensselaer-Gansevoort
family of Albany, New York (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | The World War II Liberty
ship SS Jeremiah Van Rensselaer (built 1942 at Wilmington,
North Carolina; torpedoed and sunk in the North
Atlantic Ocean, 1943) was named for
him. |
|  | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Wikipedia article — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
John Bubenheim Bayard (1738-1807) —
of Philadelphia, Philadelphia
County, Pa.; New Brunswick, Middlesex
County, N.J.
Born in Bohemia Manor, Cecil
County, Md., August
11, 1738.
Merchant;
member of Pennsylvania state legislature, 1776; Delegate
to Continental Congress from Pennsylvania, 1785; mayor
of New Brunswick, N.J., 1794-96.
Died in New Brunswick, Middlesex
County, N.J., January
7, 1807 (age 68 years, 149
days).
Interment at First
Presbyterian Churchyard, New Brunswick, N.J.
|
 |
George Clinton (1739-1812) —
of Ulster
County, N.Y.; New York, New York
County, N.Y.
Born in Little Britain, Orange
County, N.Y., July 26,
1739.
Delegate
to Continental Congress from New York, 1775-76; Governor of
New York, 1777-95, 1801-04; delegate
to New York convention to ratify U.S. constitution from Ulster
County, 1788; member of New York
state assembly from New York County, 1800-01; Vice
President of the United States, 1805-12; died in office 1812.
Christian
Reformed. Scotch-Irish
ancestry. Member, Freemasons.
Died in Washington,
D.C., April
20, 1812 (age 72 years, 269
days).
Original interment at Congressional
Cemetery, Washington, D.C.; reinterment in 1908 at Old
Dutch Churchyard, Kingston, N.Y.
|
|
Henry Cruger (1739-1827) —
of Bristol, England;
New York, New York
County, N.Y.
Born in New York, New York
County, N.Y., November
22, 1739.
Merchant;
member, British Parliament, 1774-80, 1784-90; also served as mayor
and sheriff of Bristol, England; member of New York
state senate Southern District, 1792-96.
Died April
24, 1827 (age 87 years, 153
days).
Burial location unknown.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Henry Cruger (1707-1780) and Elizabeth (Harris) Cruger; nephew of
John
Cruger Jr.; grandson of John
Cruger; grandnephew of Johannes
Cuyler; first cousin once removed of Cornelis
Cuyler; second cousin of Robert
Livingston, Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Philip
Livingston and William
Livingston; second cousin once removed of Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston and Henry
Brockholst Livingston; second cousin twice removed of Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Henry
Walter Livingston, Rensselaer
Westerlo, Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843), Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, William
Jay and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873); second cousin thrice removed of Philip
Schuyler, Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Edward
Livingston, William
Duer, Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer, Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard and John
Jay II; second cousin four times removed of Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer, Nicholas
Fish, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936), John
Kean, Hamilton
Fish Kean and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870); second cousin five times removed
of Herbert
Livingston Satterlee, Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933), Bronson
Murray Cutting, Robert
Reginald Livingston, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991), Robert
Winthrop Kean and Brockholst
Livingston. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also Wikipedia
article |
|
|
Walter Livingston (1740-1797) —
of Albany
County, N.Y.
Born November
27, 1740.
Albany
County Judge, 1774-75; member of New York
state assembly from Albany County, 1777-79, 1784-85; Speaker of
the New York State Assembly, 1777-79; Delegate
to Continental Congress from New York, 1784-85.
Died in New York, New York
County, N.Y., May 14,
1797 (age 56 years, 168
days).
Interment at Trinity
Churchyard, Manhattan, N.Y.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790) and Maria (Thong) Livingston;
brother-in-law of James
Duane; brother of Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794); married, March
13, 1767, to Cornelia Schuyler; father of Henry
Walter Livingston; nephew of Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Philip
Livingston and William
Livingston; grandfather of Edward
Livingston (1796-1840); grandnephew of John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775) and Gilbert
Livingston; granduncle of Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859); great-grandson of Robert
Livingston the Elder and Pieter
Van Brugh; great-grandnephew of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724), Johannes
Cuyler and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); second great-grandfather of Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870) and Bronson
Murray Cutting; second great-granduncle of Herbert
Livingston Satterlee; third great-grandfather of Brockholst
Livingston; first cousin by marriage of William
Duer (1747-1799); first cousin of Philip
Peter Livingston, Catherine Livingston (who married Nicholas
Bayard), Susannah Livingston (who married John
Cleves Symmes), Susanna Livingston (who married John
Kean (1756-1795)), Sarah Van Brugh Livingston (who married John
Jay) and Henry
Brockholst Livingston; first cousin once removed of Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775), Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843), Rensselaer
Westerlo, Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, William
Jay and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873); first cousin twice removed of Robert
Livingston the Younger, Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746), Cornelis
Cuyler, John
Cruger Jr., Philip
Schuyler, William
Duer (1805-1879), Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer, Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard and John
Jay II; first cousin thrice removed of David
Davidse Schuyler, Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler, Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer, Nicholas
Fish, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936), John
Kean (1852-1914) and Hamilton
Fish Kean; first cousin four times removed of Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933), Robert
Reginald Livingston, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991) and Robert
Winthrop Kean; first cousin five times removed of John
Eliot Thayer Jr., Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996) and Thomas
Howard Kean; first cousin six times removed of Hamilton
Fish (born 1951), Alexa
Fish Ward and Thomas
Howard Kean Jr.; second cousin of Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), Philip
Van Cortlandt, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr. and Edward
Livingston (1764-1836); second cousin once removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Pierre
Van Cortlandt, Philip
John Schuyler, Philip
P. Schuyler, Stephen
John Schuyler, Henry
Cruger and Hamilton
Fish (1808-1893); second cousin twice removed of Gilbert
Livingston Thompson and John
Jacob Astor III; second cousin thrice removed of William
Waldorf Astor and Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright; second cousin four times removed of Guy
Vernor Henry, William
Astor Chanler, Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler, Montgomery
Schuyler Jr., Peter
Goelet Gerry, Helen
Roosevelt Robinson and Ogden
Livingston Mills; third cousin of Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792), James
Livingston, Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler and James
Parker; third cousin once removed of Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Maturin
Livingston, James
Alexander Hamilton, George
Washington Schuyler, John
Cortlandt Parker and Philip
N. Schuyler; third cousin twice removed of Gerrit
Smith, Elizabeth
Cady Stanton, James
Adams Ekin, Eugene
Schuyler, Richard
Wayne Parker and Charles
Wolcott Parker; third cousin thrice removed of Robert
Ray Hamilton, John
Sluyter Wirt, Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer and Karl
Cortlandt Schuyler. |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Livingston-Duer
family of New York City, New York (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page |
|
|
Philip Peter Livingston (1740-1810) —
also known as Philip Livingston —
of Westchester
County, N.Y.
Born in Albany, Albany
County, N.Y., 1740.
Delegate
to New York convention to ratify U.S. constitution from
Westchester County, 1788; member of New York
state assembly from Westchester County, 1788-89; member of New York
state senate Southern District, 1789-93, 1795-98; member of New York
council of appointment, 1790.
Died in May, 1810
(age about
69 years).
Burial location unknown.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Peter
Van Brugh Livingston and Mary (Alexander) Livingston; brother of
Catherine Livingston (who married Nicholas
Bayard) and Susanna Livingston (who married John
Kean (1756-1795)); father of Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873); nephew of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Philip
Livingston and William
Livingston; grandson of James
Alexander; grandnephew of John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775) and Gilbert
Livingston; great-grandson of Robert
Livingston the Elder and Pieter
Van Brugh; great-grandnephew of Abraham
de Peyster, Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724), Johannes
Cuyler, Johannes
de Peyster and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); great-granduncle of Nicholas
Fish, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936), John
Kean (1852-1914) and Hamilton
Fish Kean; second great-granduncle of Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991) and Robert
Winthrop Kean; third great-granduncle of Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996) and Thomas
Howard Kean; fourth great-granduncle of Hamilton
Fish (born 1951), Alexa
Fish Ward and Thomas
Howard Kean Jr.; first cousin by marriage of James
Duane and William
Duer (1747-1799); first cousin of Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, Susannah Livingston (who married John
Cleves Symmes), John
Stevens III, Sarah Van Brugh Livingston (who married John
Jay) and Henry
Brockholst Livingston; first cousin once removed of Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775), Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Henry
Walter Livingston, Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843), Rensselaer
Westerlo, Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer and William
Jay; first cousin twice removed of Robert
Livingston the Younger, Johannes
DePeyster, Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746), Cornelis
Cuyler, John
Cruger Jr., Philip
Schuyler, Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Edward
Livingston (1796-1840), William
Duer (1805-1879), Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer, Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard and John
Jay II; first cousin thrice removed of David
Davidse Schuyler, Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler, Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870); first cousin four times removed of
Herbert
Livingston Satterlee, Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933), Bronson
Murray Cutting, Robert
Reginald Livingston and Brockholst
Livingston; first cousin five times removed of John
Eliot Thayer Jr.; second cousin of Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), Philip
Van Cortlandt, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr. and Edward
Livingston (1764-1836); second cousin once removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Pierre
Van Cortlandt, Matthew
Clarkson, Philip
John Schuyler, Philip
P. Schuyler, Stephen
John Schuyler, Henry
Cruger, Henry
Rutgers and Hamilton
Fish (1808-1893); second cousin twice removed of Gilbert
Livingston Thompson and John
Jacob Astor III; second cousin thrice removed of William
Waldorf Astor and Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright; second cousin four times removed of Guy
Vernor Henry, William
Astor Chanler, Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler, Montgomery
Schuyler Jr., Peter
Goelet Gerry, Helen
Roosevelt Robinson and Ogden
Livingston Mills; third cousin of Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792), James
Livingston, Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler, Philip
DePeyster and James
Parker; third cousin once removed of Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Maturin
Livingston, James
Alexander Hamilton, George
Washington Schuyler, John
Cortlandt Parker and Philip
N. Schuyler; third cousin twice removed of Gerrit
Smith, Elizabeth
Cady Stanton, James
Adams Ekin, Eugene
Schuyler, Richard
Wayne Parker and Charles
Wolcott Parker; third cousin thrice removed of Robert
Ray Hamilton, John
Sluyter Wirt, Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer and Karl
Cortlandt Schuyler. |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Livingston-Duer
family of New York City, New York (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|
|
Robert Van Rensselaer (1740-1802) —
of Albany
County, N.Y.
Born in Rensselaer, Rensselaer
County, N.Y., December
16, 1740.
Member of New York
state assembly from Albany County, 1777-79, 1780-81; Federalist
Presidential Elector for New York, 1796.
Died September
11, 1802 (age 61 years, 269
days).
Burial location unknown.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Engeltie 'Angelica' (Livingston) Van Rensselaer and Johannes Van
Rensselaer; brother of Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer; married, April
23, 1765, to Cornelia Rutsen; father of Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer; uncle of Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler; grandson of Robert
Livingston the Younger; granduncle of Philip
Schuyler and James
Alexander Hamilton; great-grandson of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724); great-grandnephew of Stephanus
Van Cortlandt, Robert
Livingston the Elder, Jacobus
Van Cortlandt and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); great-granduncle of Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer; second great-granduncle of Robert
Ray Hamilton; third great-granduncle of John
Eliot Thayer Jr.; first cousin of Volkert
Petrus Douw, Hendrick
Kiliaen Van Rensselaer, James
Livingston and Killian
Killian Van Rensselaer; first cousin once removed of Philip
P. Schuyler, Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), Leonard
Gansevoort, Leonard
Gansevoort Jr., Edward
Livingston (1764-1836), Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847) and Maturin
Livingston; first cousin twice removed of John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775), Gilbert
Livingston, Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746), Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Peter
Gansevoort, Gerrit
Smith and Elizabeth
Cady Stanton; first cousin thrice removed of David
Davidse Schuyler, Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler and John
Jacob Astor III; first cousin four times removed of William
Waldorf Astor, Peter
Goelet Gerry and Ogden
Livingston Mills; first cousin five times removed of William
Astor Chanler, Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler, Helen
Roosevelt Robinson, Robert
Reginald Livingston and John
Hubner II; second cousin of Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792) and Peter
Samuel Schuyler; second cousin once removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Philip
Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775), Pierre
Van Cortlandt, William
Livingston, James
Jay, Philip
John Schuyler, Matthew
Clarkson (1733-1800), Stephen
John Schuyler, John
Jay, Frederick
Jay, Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer and Henry
Walter Livingston; second cousin twice removed of Edward
Livingston (1796-1840) and Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer; second cousin thrice removed of Charles
Pinckney Brown and Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer; second cousin four times removed of Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870) and Bronson
Murray Cutting; second cousin five times removed of Brockholst
Livingston; third cousin of Nicholas
Bayard, Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, Philip
Van Cortlandt, Henry
Brockholst Livingston, Matthew
Clarkson (1758-1825), Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., James
Parker, Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843) and William
Jay; third cousin once removed of Rensselaer
Westerlo, Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873), Hamilton
Fish, George
Washington Schuyler, John
Jay II, John
Cortlandt Parker and Philip
N. Schuyler; third cousin twice removed of Gilbert
Livingston Thompson, William
Duer, Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard, James
Adams Ekin, Eugene
Schuyler, Richard
Wayne Parker, Nicholas
Fish, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936) and Charles
Wolcott Parker; third cousin thrice removed of John
Sluyter Wirt, John
Kean, Hamilton
Fish Kean, Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright, Karl
Cortlandt Schuyler, Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933) and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991). |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; VanRensselaer-Gansevoort
family of Albany, New York (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|
|
William Fitzhugh (1741-1809) —
of Virginia.
Born in King George
County, Va., August
24, 1741.
Member of Virginia
state house of delegates, 1776-77, 1780-81, 1787-88; Delegate
to Continental Congress from Virginia, 1779; member of Virginia
state senate, 1781-85.
Died in Fairfax
County, Va., June 6,
1809 (age 67 years, 286
days).
Interment a
private or family graveyard, Fairfax County, Va.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Henry Fitzhugh and Lucy (Carter) Fitzhugh; married 1778 to Sarah
Digges; married to Ann Bolling Randolph; great-grandfather of William
Henry Fitzhugh Lee; first cousin of Benjamin
Harrison (1726-1791) and Robert
Carter Nicholas (1729-1780); first cousin once removed of George
Nicholas, Carter
Bassett Harrison, Wilson
Cary Nicholas, John
Nicholas and William
Henry Harrison (1773-1841); first cousin twice removed of Peyton
Randolph, Robert
Carter Nicholas (1787-1857) and John
Scott Harrison (1804-1878); first cousin thrice removed of Thomas
Marshall, James
Keith Marshall, Peter
Myndert Dox, Edmund
Randolph, Carter
Henry Harrison, Benjamin
Harrison (1833-1901), John
Breckinridge Castleman and John
Scott Harrison (1844-1926); first cousin four times removed of Edmund
Randolph Cocke, Connally
Findlay Trigg, Russell
Benjamin Harrison, Richard
Evelyn Byrd, Carter
Henry Harrison II, Harry
Bartow Hawes and William
Welby Beverley; first cousin five times removed of Francis
Beverley Biddle, Harry
Flood Byrd and William
Henry Harrison (1896-1990); first cousin six times removed of Harry
Flood Byrd Jr.. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Theodorick Bland (1742-1790) —
of Prince
George County, Va.
Born in Cawsons, Prince
George County, Va., March
21, 1742.
Physician;
planter;
served in the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War; Delegate
to Continental Congress from Virginia, 1780-83; delegate
to Virginia convention to ratify U.S. constitution from Prince
George County, 1788; U.S.
Representative from Virginia at-large, 1789-90; died in office
1790.
Slaveowner.
Died in New York, New York
County, N.Y., June 1,
1790 (age 48 years, 72
days).
Original interment at Trinity
Churchyard, Manhattan, N.Y.; reinterment in 1828 at Congressional
Cemetery, Washington, D.C.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Theodorick Bland (1708-1803) and Frances Elizabeth (Bolling)
Bland; married 1768 to Martha
Dangerfield; nephew of Richard
Bland; uncle of John
Randolph of Roanoke and Henry
St. George Tucker; grandnephew of Richard
Randolph; granduncle of Nathaniel
Beverly Tucker; first cousin once removed of Peyton
Randolph (1721-1775), Henry
Lee, Charles
Lee, Richard
Bland Lee and Edmund
Jennings Lee; first cousin thrice removed of Fitzhugh
Lee and William
Henry Fitzhugh Lee; first cousin five times removed of William
Welby Beverley; first cousin six times removed of Lee
Marvin; second cousin of Thomas
Jefferson, Edmund
Jenings Randolph and Beverley
Randolph; second cousin once removed of John
Marshall, James
Markham Marshall, Thomas
Mann Randolph Jr., Alexander
Keith Marshall, Martha
Jefferson Randolph, Dabney
Carr, John
Wayles Eppes, Theodorick
Bland (1776-1846) and Peyton
Randolph (1779-1828); second cousin twice removed of Thomas
Marshall, John
Robertson, Benjamin
William Sheridan Cabell, James
Keith Marshall, Francis
Wayles Eppes, Dabney
Smith Carr, Benjamin
Franklin Randolph, Meriwether
Lewis Randolph, George
Wythe Randolph, Edmund
Randolph, Carter
Henry Harrison and John
Breckinridge Castleman; second cousin thrice removed of William
Lewis Cabell, Thomas
Jefferson Coolidge, George
Craighead Cabell, Edmund
Randolph Cocke, John
Augustine Marshall, Carter
Henry Harrison II, Frederick
Madison Roberts and Douglass
Townshend Bolling; second cousin four times removed of Joel
Walker Flood, Thomas
Lawton Davis, Connally
Findlay Trigg, Benjamin
Earl Cabell, John
Gardner Coolidge, Edith
Wilson, William
Marshall Bullitt, Alexander
Scott Bullitt, Francis
Beverley Biddle and Richard
Walker Bolling; second cousin five times removed of Henry
De La Warr Flood, Joel
West Flood and Earle
Cabell; third cousin of David
Meriwether (1755-1822), James
Meriwether (1755-1817) and Meriwether
Lewis; third cousin once removed of James
Meriwether (1788-1852), David
Meriwether (1800-1893) and James
Archibald Meriwether; third cousin twice removed of George
Rockingham Gilmer and Reuben
Handy Meriwether; third cousin thrice removed of William
Henry Robertson. |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Lee-Mason
family of Virginia (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Wikipedia article |
|
|
Jacquelin Ambler (1742-1798) —
of Virginia.
Born August
9, 1742.
Virginia
state treasurer, 1780.
Died in Richmond,
Va., January
10, 1798 (age 55 years, 154
days).
Interment at St.
John's Church Cemetery, Church Hill, Richmond, Va.
|
|
John Cleves Symmes (1742-1814) —
Born in Riverhead, Suffolk
County, Long Island, N.Y., July 21,
1742.
Served in the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War; associate
justice of New Jersey state supreme court, 1777-87; Delegate
to Continental Congress from New Jersey, 1785-86; justice of
Northwest Territory supreme court, 1788-1802.
Died in Cincinnati, Hamilton
County, Ohio, February
26, 1814 (age 71 years, 220
days).
Interment at Congress
Green Cemetery, North Bend, Ohio; memorial monument at Ludlow
Park, Cincinnati, Ohio.
|
 |
Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826) —
also known as "Apostle of Liberty"; "Sage of
Monticello"; "Friend of the People";
"Father of the University of Virginia" —
of Albemarle
County, Va.
Born in Albemarle
County, Va., April
13, 1743.
Lawyer;
Delegate
to Continental Congress from Virginia, 1775-76, 1783-84; signer,
Declaration of Independence, 1776; Governor of
Virginia, 1779-81; member of Virginia state legislature, 1782;
U.S. Minister to France, 1785-89; U.S.
Secretary of State, 1790-93; Vice
President of the United States, 1797-1801; President
of the United States, 1801-09; defeated (Democratic-Republican),
1796.
Deist.
English
ancestry. Member, American
Philosophical Society; American
Academy of Arts and Sciences.
He was elected to the Hall
of Fame for Great Americans in 1900.
Slaveowner.
Died near Charlottesville, Albemarle
County, Va., July 4,
1826 (age 83 years, 82
days).
Interment at Monticello
Graveyard, Near Charlottesville, Albemarle County, Va.; cenotaph
at University
of Missouri Quadrangle, Columbia, Mo.; memorial monument at West
Potomac Park, Washington, D.C.; memorial monument at Constitution Gardens, Washington, D.C.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Peter Jefferson and Jane (Randolph) Jefferson; married, January
1, 1772, to Martha Wayles Skelton; father of Martha
Jefferson (who married Thomas
Mann Randolph Jr.) and Maria Jefferson (who married John
Wayles Eppes); uncle of Dabney
Carr; grandfather of Thomas
Jefferson Randolph, Francis
Wayles Eppes, Virginia Jefferson Randolph (who married Nicholas
Philip Trist), Benjamin
Franklin Randolph, Meriwether
Lewis Randolph and George
Wythe Randolph; grandnephew of Richard
Randolph; granduncle of Dabney
Smith Carr; great-grandfather of Thomas
Jefferson Coolidge and Frederick
Madison Roberts; second great-grandfather of John
Gardner Coolidge; second great-granduncle of Edith
Wilson; first cousin once removed of Richard
Bland and Peyton
Randolph (1721-1775); first cousin twice removed of John
Jordan Crittenden, Thomas
Turpin Crittenden, Robert
Crittenden, Carter
Henry Harrison and John
Breckinridge Castleman; first cousin thrice removed of Alexander
Parker Crittenden, Thomas
Leonidas Crittenden, Thomas
Theodore Crittenden, Archelaus
Marius Woodson and Carter
Henry Harrison II; first cousin four times removed of Thomas
Theodore Crittenden Jr.; second cousin of Theodorick
Bland, Edmund
Jenings Randolph, Beverley
Randolph and John
Randolph of Roanoke; second cousin once removed of John
Marshall, Henry
Lee, Charles
Lee, Richard
Bland Lee, James
Markham Marshall, Alexander
Keith Marshall, Edmund
Jennings Lee, Peyton
Randolph (1779-1828), Henry
St. George Tucker and William
Segar Archer; second cousin twice removed of Thomas
Marshall, James
Keith Marshall, Nathaniel
Beverly Tucker and Edmund
Randolph; second cousin thrice removed of Fitzhugh
Lee, William
Henry Fitzhugh Lee, Edmund
Randolph Cocke and John
Augustine Marshall; second cousin four times removed of William
Marshall Bullitt, Alexander
Scott Bullitt and Francis
Beverley Biddle; second cousin five times removed of William
Welby Beverley; third cousin thrice removed of William
Henry Robertson. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | Cross-reference: Jefferson
M. Levy — Joshua
Fry |
|  | Jefferson counties in Ala., Ark., Colo., Fla., Ga., Idaho, Ill., Ind., Iowa, Kan., Ky., La., Miss., Mo., Mont., Neb., N.Y., Ohio, Okla., Ore., Pa., Tenn., Tex., Wash., W.Va. and Wis. are
named for him. |
|  | Mount
Jefferson (third highest peak in the Northeast), in Coos
County, New Hampshire, is named for
him. |
|  | Other politicians named for him: Thomas
Jefferson Kennard
— Thomas
J. Randolph
— Thomas
Jefferson Campbell
— Thomas
J. Gazley
— Thomas
J. Drake
— Thomas
Jefferson Heard
— Thomas
Jefferson Green
— Thomas
J. Rusk
— Thomas
Jefferson Withers
— Thomas
J. Parsons
— Thomas
J. Word
— Thomas
J. Henley
— Thomas
J. Dryer
— Thomas
J. Foster
— Thomas
J. Barr
— Thomas
Jefferson Jennings
— Thomas
J. Stewart
— Thomas
J. Henderson
— Thomas
J. Van Alstyne
— Thomas
Jefferson Cason
— T.
J. Coghlan
— Thomas
Jefferson Buford
— T.
Jefferson Coolidge
— Thomas
J. Megibben
— Thomas
J. Bunn
— Thomas
J. Hardin
— Thomas
J. McLain, Jr.
— Thomas
J. Brown
— Thomas
Jefferson Speer
— Thomas
Jefferson Counts
— Thomas
J. Boynton
— Thomas
J. Hudson
— Thomas
J. Brady
— Thomas
J. Selby
— Thomas
Jefferson Deavitt
— Thomas
Jefferson Majors
— Thomas
Jefferson Wood
— T.
J. Jarratt
— Thomas
Jefferson Nunn
— Thomas
J. Douglas
— Thomas
J. Strait
— Thomas
J. Humes
— T.
J. Appleyard
— Thomas
J. Clunie
— Thomas
J. Steele
— Thomas
J. Boynton
— Thomas
J. O'Donnell
— Thomas
J. Shaw
— Thomas
J. Halsey
— Thomas
J. Graham
— T.
J. Martin
— Thomas
Jefferson Lilly
— Thomas
J. Randolph
— Tom
J. Terral
— T.
Jeff Busby
— Thomas
Jefferson Murphy
— Thomas
J. Hamilton
— Tom
Mangan
— Thomas
J. Ryan
— Tom
J. Murray
— Thomas
J. Tydings
— Thomas
J. Tubb
— Tom
Steed
— Thomas
Jefferson Edmonds, Jr.
— Thomas
J. Anderson
— Thomas
Jefferson Roberts
— Thomas
J. Barlow III
|
|  | Coins and currency: His portrait
has appeared on the U.S. nickel (five cent coin) since 1938, and
on the $2 bill since the 1860s. |
|  | Personal motto: "Rebellion to tyrants
is obedience to God." |
|  | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — National
Governors Association biography — Wikipedia
article — U.S. State Dept career summary — NNDB
dossier — Internet Movie Database
profile — Find-A-Grave
memorial — OurCampaigns
candidate detail |
|  | Books about Thomas Jefferson: Joseph J.
Ellis, American
Sphinx: The Character of Thomas Jefferson — Willard
Sterne Randall, Thomas
Jefferson : A Life — R. B. Bernstein, Thomas
Jefferson — Joyce Appleby, Thomas
Jefferson — Gore Vidal, Inventing
A Nation: Washington, Adams, Jefferson — John Ferling,
Adams
vs. Jefferson: The Tumultuous Election of 1800 — Susan
Dunn, Jefferson's
Second Revolution : The Election Crisis of 1800 —
Andrew Burstein, Jefferson's
Secret: Death and Desire at Monticello — Christopher
Hitchens, Thomas
Jefferson : Author of America — David Barton, The
Jefferson Lies: Exposing the myths you've always believed about
Thomas Jefferson — David Barton, The
Jefferson Lies: Exposing the Myths You've Always Believed About
Thomas Jefferson — Donald Barr Chidsey, Mr.
Hamilton and Mr. Jefferson — Mike Resnick, ed., Alternate
Presidents [anthology] |
|  | Critical books about Thomas Jefferson:
Joseph Wheelan, Jefferson's
Vendetta : The Pursuit of Aaron Burr and the
Judiciary |
|  | Image source: Portrait & Biographical
Album of Washtenaw County (1891) |
|
|
Hendrick Kiliaen Van Rensselaer (1744-1816) —
also known as Henry K. Van Rensselaer —
of Albany, Albany
County, N.Y.
Born in Albany, Albany
County, N.Y., July 25,
1744.
Member of New York
state assembly from Albany County, 1788-90.
Dutch
ancestry.
Died in Albany, Albany
County, N.Y., September
9, 1816 (age 72 years, 46
days).
Burial location unknown.
|  |
Relatives:
Brother of Killian
Killian Van Rensselaer; great-grandnephew of Stephanus
Van Cortlandt and Jacobus
Van Cortlandt; third great-grandfather of John
Hubner II; first cousin of Volkert
Petrus Douw, Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer and Robert
Van Rensselaer; first cousin once removed of Leonard
Gansevoort, Leonard
Gansevoort Jr., Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer and Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler; first cousin twice removed of Philip
Schuyler, James
Alexander Hamilton and Peter
Gansevoort; first cousin thrice removed of Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer; first cousin four times removed of Robert
Ray Hamilton; first cousin five times removed of John
Eliot Thayer Jr.; second cousin of Philip
P. Schuyler; second cousin once removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Pierre
Van Cortlandt, James
Jay, Philip
John Schuyler, Stephen
John Schuyler, John
Jay, Pieter
Schuyler, Frederick
Jay, Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Stephen
Van Rensselaer and Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer; second cousin twice removed of Henry
Walter Livingston and Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer; second cousin thrice removed of Edward
Livingston, Charles
Pinckney Brown and Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer; second cousin five times removed of Charles
Ludlow Livingston and Bronson
Murray Cutting; third cousin of Nicholas
Bayard, Philip
Van Cortlandt, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843), James
Parker and William
Jay; third cousin once removed of John
Jay II and John
Cortlandt Parker; third cousin twice removed of James
Adams Ekin, Richard
Wayne Parker and Charles
Wolcott Parker; third cousin thrice removed of John
Sluyter Wirt and Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933). |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; VanRensselaer-Gansevoort
family of Albany, New York (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also Wikipedia article |
|
|
William Paterson (1745-1806) —
of New Jersey.
Born in County Antrim, Ireland (now Northern
Ireland), December
24, 1745.
Delegate
to New Jersey state constitutional convention, 1776; New
Jersey state attorney general, 1776-83; Delegate
to Continental Congress from New Jersey, 1780, 1787; member,
U.S. Constitutional Convention, 1787; U.S.
Senator from New Jersey, 1789-90; Governor of
New Jersey, 1790-93; chancellor
of New Jersey court of chancery, 1790-93; Associate
Justice of U.S. Supreme Court, 1793-1806; died in office 1806.
Presbyterian.
Member, Freemasons.
Injured in a horsedrawn
coach accident in 1803, and died from his wounds three years
later, in Albany, Albany
County, N.Y., September
9, 1806 (age 60 years, 259
days).
Original interment at a private or family graveyard, Albany County, N.Y.; reinterment
at Albany
Rural Cemetery, Menands, N.Y.; cenotaph at Van
Liew Cemetery, North Brunswick, N.J.
|
|
Thomas Tudor Tucker (1745-1828) —
of Charleston, Charleston
County, S.C.
Born in Port Royal, Bermuda,
June
25, 1745.
Physician;
member of South
Carolina state house of representatives, 1776, 1782-83, 1785,
1787-88; Delegate
to Continental Congress from South Carolina, 1787-88; U.S.
Representative from South Carolina at-large, 1789-93; treasurer
of the United States, 1801-28.
Slaveowner.
Died in Washington,
D.C., May 2,
1828 (age 82 years, 312
days).
Interment at Congressional
Cemetery, Washington, D.C.
|
 |
John Jay (1745-1829) —
of New York, New York
County, N.Y.
Born in New York, New York
County, N.Y., December
12, 1745.
Lawyer;
law partner of Robert
R. Livingston; Delegate
to Continental Congress from New York, 1774-76, 1778-79; state
court judge in New York, 1777; U.S. Minister to Spain, 1779-82; delegate
to New York convention to ratify U.S. constitution from New York
County, 1788; received 9 electoral votes, 1789;
received 5 electoral votes, 1796;
received one electoral vote, 1800;
Chief
Justice of U.S. Supreme Court, 1789-95; resigned 1795; U.S.
Secretary of State, 1789-90; Governor of
New York, 1795-1801; defeated, 1792.
Episcopalian.
French
Huguenot and Dutch
ancestry.
Died in Bedford, Westchester
County, N.Y., May 17,
1829 (age 83 years, 156
days).
Interment at Jay
Family Cemetery, Rye, N.Y.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Pierre 'Peter' Jay and Mary (Van Cortlandt) Jay; brother of James
Jay and Frederick
Jay; married to Sarah Van Brugh Livingston (daughter of William
Livingston; sister-in-law of John
Cleves Symmes; sister of Henry
Brockholst Livingston; niece of Robert
Livingston, Peter
Van Brugh Livingston and Philip
Livingston; first cousin of Peter
Robert Livingston, Walter
Livingston and Philip
Peter Livingston); father of Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843) and William
Jay; grandson of Jacobus
Van Cortlandt; grandfather of John
Jay II; grandnephew of Stephanus
Van Cortlandt; second great-grandfather of Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933); second cousin of Stephanus
Bayard, Pierre
Van Cortlandt, Philip
John Schuyler and Stephen
John Schuyler; second cousin once removed of Volkert
Petrus Douw, Nicholas
Bayard, Philip
P. Schuyler, Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Hendrick
Kiliaen Van Rensselaer, Pieter
Schuyler, Philip
Van Cortlandt, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., Killian
Killian Van Rensselaer, Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler, James
Parker and Hamilton
Fish (1808-1893); second cousin twice removed of Leonard
Gansevoort, Leonard
Gansevoort Jr., Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Henry
Walter Livingston, Philip
Schuyler, James
Alexander Hamilton, John
Cortlandt Parker, Nicholas
Fish and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936); second cousin thrice removed of Peter
Gansevoort, Edward
Livingston, Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard, James
Adams Ekin, Richard
Wayne Parker, Charles
Wolcott Parker, Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991); second cousin four times removed of Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Ray Hamilton, John
Sluyter Wirt, Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Charles
Ludlow Livingston and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996); second cousin five times removed of John
Eliot Thayer Jr., Bronson
Murray Cutting, Brockholst
Livingston, Marietta
Peabody Tree, Endicott
Peabody, Hamilton
Fish (born 1951) and Alexa
Fish Ward. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | Jay County,
Ind. is named for him. |
|  | The World War II Liberty
ship SS John Jay (built 1941-42 at Portland,
Oregon; scrapped 1960) was named for
him. |
|  | Other politicians named for him: John
Lovett
— John
J. Walbridge
— John
J. Jackson
— John
J. Hardin
— John
Jay Jackson, Jr.
— John
Jay Hart
— John J.
Good
— John
Jay Knox
— John
J. Jamieson
— John
Jay Philbrick
— John
J. Kleiner
— John
J. Carton
— John
J. McCarthy
— John
J. Dorman
— John
Jay Hopkins
— John
J. McCloy
— John
Jay Justice
— John
Jay Pilar
— John
Jay Hooker
— John
Jay LaValle
— John
Jay Myers
|
|  | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — federal
judicial profile — National Governors
Association biography — Wikipedia
article — Ballotpedia article — U.S. State Dept career summary — NNDB
dossier — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|  | Books about John Jay: Walter Stahr, John
Jay : Founding Father — Phil Webster, Can
a Chief Justice Love God? The Life of John Jay |
|  | Image source: U.S. postage stamp
(1958) |
|
|
Henry Rutgers (1745-1830) —
of New York, New York
County, N.Y.; New Brunswick, Middlesex
County, N.J.
Born in New York, New York
County, N.Y., October
7, 1745.
Served in the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War; member
of New York
state assembly from New York County, 1777-78, 1783-84, 1800-02,
1803-05, 1806-08; resigned 1778.
Dutch
Reformed.
Died February
17, 1830 (age 84 years, 133
days).
Original interment at Dutch
Church Burial Ground, Manhattan, N.Y.; reinterment in 1865 at Green-Wood
Cemetery, Brooklyn, N.Y.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Hendrick Rutgers and Catharine (De Peyster) Rutgers; nephew of Johannes
DePeyster; grandson of Johannes
de Peyster; grandnephew of Abraham
de Peyster; first cousin of Matthew
Clarkson; first cousin once removed of Philip
DePeyster; second cousin of Pierre
Van Cortlandt; second cousin once removed of Philip
Peter Livingston, Philip
Van Cortlandt, John
Stevens III and Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr.; second cousin twice removed of William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer and Charles
Ludlow Livingston; second cousin thrice removed of William
Duer and Denning
Duer; second cousin four times removed of Nicholas
Fish, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936), John
Kean and Hamilton
Fish Kean; second cousin five times removed of Robert
Reginald Livingston, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991) and Robert
Winthrop Kean. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | Rutgers University
(founded 1766 as Queens College; renamed 1825 as Rutgers College) in
New
Brunswick, New Jersey, is named for
him. — Henry Street
and Rutgers Street,
in Manhattan,
New York, are both named for
him. |
|  | See also Wikipedia
article — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
 |
Robert R. Livingston (1746-1813) —
of New York, New York
County, N.Y.
Born in New York, New York
County, N.Y., November
27, 1746.
Lawyer;
law partner of John
Jay; Delegate
to Continental Congress from New York, 1775; delegate
to New York state constitutional convention, 1777; U.S. Secretary
for Foreign Affairs, 1781-83; delegate
to New York convention to ratify U.S. constitution from New York
County, 1788; candidate for Governor of
New York, 1798; U.S. Minister to France, 1801-04; negotiated the Louisiana Purchase.
Member, Freemasons.
Died February
26, 1813 (age 66 years, 91
days).
Original interment in private or family graveyard; reinterment at St.
Paul's Churchyard, Tivoli, N.Y.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775) and Margaret (Beekman) Livingston;
brother of Alida Livingston (who married John
Armstrong Jr.), Gertrude Livingston (who married Morgan
Lewis) and Edward
Livingston (1764-1836); married 1770 to Mary
Stevens (daughter of John
Stevens; sister of John
Stevens III); father of Elizabeth Stevens Livingston (who married
Edward
Philip Livingston (1779-1843)); uncle of Robert
Livingston Tillotson; grandson of Robert
Livingston (1688-1775); grandnephew of John
Livingston and Gilbert
Livingston; granduncle of John
Jacob Astor III; great-grandson of Robert
Livingston the Elder and Robert
Livingston the Younger; great-grandnephew of Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); great-granduncle of William
Waldorf Astor; second great-grandson of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724); second great-grandfather of Robert
Reginald Livingston; second great-granduncle of William
Astor Chanler, Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler, Peter
Goelet Gerry, Helen
Roosevelt Robinson and Ogden
Livingston Mills; ancestor *** of Robert
Livingston Beeckman; first cousin once removed of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Philip
Livingston, William
Livingston, Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer and James
Livingston; first cousin twice removed of Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746) and Philip
P. Schuyler; first cousin thrice removed of David
Davidse Schuyler and Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler; second cousin of Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, Philip
Van Cortlandt, Henry
Brockholst Livingston, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler and Maturin
Livingston; second cousin once removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Pierre
Van Cortlandt, Philip
John Schuyler, Stephen
John Schuyler, Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792), Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Henry
Walter Livingston, Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843), Rensselaer
Westerlo, Edward
Philip Livingston (1779-1843), William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, Philip
Schuyler, James
Alexander Hamilton, Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), William
Jay, Gerrit
Smith, Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873), Hamilton
Fish (1808-1893) and Elizabeth
Cady Stanton; second cousin twice removed of Matthew
Clarkson (1733-1800), Gilbert
Livingston Thompson, Edward
Livingston (1796-1840), William
Duer, Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer, Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard, John
Jay II, Nicholas
Fish, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936) and Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer; second cousin thrice removed of Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Ray Hamilton, John
Kean, Hamilton
Fish Kean, Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright, Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870) and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991); second cousin four times removed of Guy
Vernor Henry, Herbert
Livingston Satterlee, Montgomery
Schuyler Jr., Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933), John
Eliot Thayer Jr., Bronson
Murray Cutting, Robert
Winthrop Kean, Brockholst
Livingston and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996); second cousin five times removed of Thomas
Howard Kean, Hamilton
Fish (born 1951) and Alexa
Fish Ward; third cousin of Nicholas
Bayard and James
Parker; third cousin once removed of Matthew
Clarkson (1758-1825), George
Washington Schuyler, John
Cortlandt Parker and Philip
N. Schuyler; third cousin twice removed of James
Adams Ekin, Eugene
Schuyler, Richard
Wayne Parker and Charles
Wolcott Parker; third cousin thrice removed of John
Sluyter Wirt and Karl
Cortlandt Schuyler; fourth cousin of Peter
Gansevoort. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | Livingston counties in Ky., La. and N.Y. are
named for him. |
|  | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Wikipedia article — U.S. State Dept career summary — NNDB
dossier — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|  | Image source: New York Public
Library |
|
|
Pieter Schuyler (1746-1792) —
also known as Peter Schuyler —
of Albany
County, N.Y.
Born in Albany, Albany
County, N.Y., March
20, 1746.
Member of New York
state assembly from Albany County, 1783-84; member of New York
state senate Western District, 1786-92; died in office 1792;
member of New York
council of appointment, 1787, 1791.
Died January
4, 1792 (age 45 years, 290
days).
Burial location unknown.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Pieter Schuyler (1723-1753) and Gertrude (Schuyler) Schuyler;
nephew of Philip
John Schuyler, Philip
P. Schuyler and Stephen
John Schuyler; uncle of Henry
Walter Livingston; grandson of Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746); granduncle of Edward
Livingston (1796-1840); great-grandson of Stephanus
Van Cortlandt, Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724) and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); great-grandnephew of Jacobus
Van Cortlandt; second great-granduncle of Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870) and Bronson
Murray Cutting; third great-granduncle of Brockholst
Livingston; first cousin of Peter
Samuel Schuyler and Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler; first cousin once removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Pierre
Van Cortlandt, James
Alexander Hamilton and Philip
Schuyler; first cousin twice removed of John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775) and Gilbert
Livingston; first cousin thrice removed of David
Davidse Schuyler, Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler and Robert
Ray Hamilton; first cousin four times removed of John
Eliot Thayer Jr.; second cousin of Nicholas
Bayard, Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, James
Livingston, Philip
Van Cortlandt, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer and James
Parker; second cousin once removed of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Philip
Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775), Volkert
Petrus Douw, William
Livingston, James
Jay, Hendrick
Kiliaen Van Rensselaer, John
Jay, Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), Frederick
Jay, Killian
Killian Van Rensselaer, Edward
Livingston (1764-1836), Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Maturin
Livingston, Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer and John
Cortlandt Parker; second cousin twice removed of Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Gerrit
Smith, Elizabeth
Cady Stanton, James
Adams Ekin, Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer, Richard
Wayne Parker and Charles
Wolcott Parker; second cousin thrice removed of John
Jacob Astor III, John
Sluyter Wirt and Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer; second cousin four times removed of William
Waldorf Astor, Peter
Goelet Gerry, Ogden
Livingston Mills, Marietta
Peabody Tree and Endicott
Peabody; second cousin five times removed of William
Astor Chanler, Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler, Helen
Roosevelt Robinson and Robert
Reginald Livingston; third cousin of Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, Leonard
Gansevoort, Leonard
Gansevoort Jr., Henry
Brockholst Livingston, Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843) and William
Jay; third cousin once removed of Rensselaer
Westerlo, Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, Peter
Gansevoort, Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873), Hamilton
Fish, George
Washington Schuyler, John
Jay II and Philip
N. Schuyler; third cousin twice removed of Gilbert
Livingston Thompson, William
Duer, Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard, Eugene
Schuyler, Nicholas
Fish and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936); third cousin thrice removed of John
Kean, Hamilton
Fish Kean, Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright, Karl
Cortlandt Schuyler, Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933) and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991). |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Schuyler
family of Albany, New York (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|
|
William Duer (1747-1799) —
also known as "Philo-Publius" —
of New
York County, N.Y.
Born in Devon, England,
March
18, 1747.
Planter;
timber and
lumber merchant; delegate
to New York state constitutional convention, 1776; member of New York
state senate Eastern District, 1777; Delegate
to Continental Congress from New York, 1777; member of New York
state assembly from New York County, 1785-86; went bankrupt as a
result of the Panic of 1792, and was imprisoned
for debt.
Died, in debtor's
prison, New York, New York
County, N.Y., April
18, 1799 (age 52 years, 31
days).
Originally entombed at Old
St. Thomas Church, Manhattan, N.Y.; reinterment at Trinity
Cemetery, Manhattan, N.Y.
|
|
Frederick Jay (1747-1799) —
also known as Fady Jay —
of New
York County, N.Y.
Born April
19, 1747.
Member of New York
state assembly from New York County, 1777-83.
French
Huguenot and Dutch
ancestry.
Died December
14, 1799 (age 52 years, 239
days).
Burial location unknown.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Pierre 'Peter' Jay and Mary (Van Cortlandt) Jay; brother of James
Jay and John
Jay; uncle of Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843) and William
Jay; grandson of Jacobus
Van Cortlandt; grandnephew of Stephanus
Van Cortlandt; granduncle of John
Jay II; second great-granduncle of Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933); second cousin of Stephanus
Bayard, Pierre
Van Cortlandt, Philip
John Schuyler and Stephen
John Schuyler; second cousin once removed of Volkert
Petrus Douw, Nicholas
Bayard, Philip
P. Schuyler, Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Hendrick
Kiliaen Van Rensselaer, Pieter
Schuyler, Philip
Van Cortlandt, Henry
Brockholst Livingston, Matthew
Clarkson, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., Killian
Killian Van Rensselaer, Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler, James
Parker and Hamilton
Fish (1808-1893); second cousin twice removed of Leonard
Gansevoort, Leonard
Gansevoort Jr., Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Henry
Walter Livingston, James
Alexander Hamilton, Philip
Schuyler, John
Cortlandt Parker, Nicholas
Fish and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936); second cousin thrice removed of Peter
Gansevoort, Edward
Livingston, Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard, James
Adams Ekin, Richard
Wayne Parker, Charles
Wolcott Parker, Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991); second cousin four times removed of Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Ray Hamilton, John
Sluyter Wirt, Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Charles
Ludlow Livingston and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996); second cousin five times removed of John
Eliot Thayer Jr., Bronson
Murray Cutting, Brockholst
Livingston, Marietta
Peabody Tree, Endicott
Peabody, Hamilton
Fish (born 1951) and Alexa
Fish Ward. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|
|
James Livingston (1747-1832) —
of Montgomery
County, N.Y.
Born in Albany, Albany
County, N.Y., March
27, 1747.
Member of New York
state assembly, 1783-88, 1789-91 (Tryon County 1783-84,
Montgomery County 1784-88, 1789-91).
Died in Johnstown, Fulton
County, N.Y., November
29, 1832 (age 85 years, 247
days).
Interment at Colonial Cemetery, Johnstown, N.Y.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of John Livingston (1709-1791) and Catryna (Ten Broeck) Livingston;
married to Elizabeth Simpson; grandson of Robert
Livingston the Younger and Dirck
Ten Broeck; grandfather of Gerrit
Smith and Elizabeth
Cady Stanton; great-grandson of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724); great-grandnephew of Robert
Livingston the Elder and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); second great-grandson of Dirck
Wesselse Ten Broeck; first cousin of Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer and Robert
Van Rensselaer; first cousin once removed of Philip
P. Schuyler, Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), Edward
Livingston (1764-1836), Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler, Maturin
Livingston, Rensselaer
Westerlo and Edward
Philip Livingston; first cousin twice removed of John
Livingston (1680-1720), Robert
Livingston (1688-1775), Gilbert
Livingston, Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746), Cornelis
Cuyler, Philip
Schuyler, James
Alexander Hamilton, Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Edward
Livingston (1796-1840) and Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer; first cousin thrice removed of David
Davidse Schuyler, Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler, John
Jacob Astor III, Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer and Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer; first cousin four times removed of William
Waldorf Astor, Robert
Ray Hamilton, Peter
Goelet Gerry, Ogden
Livingston Mills and Robert
Reginald Livingston; first cousin five times removed of William
Astor Chanler, Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler, Helen
Roosevelt Robinson and John
Eliot Thayer Jr.; second cousin of Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792) and Peter
Samuel Schuyler; second cousin once removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Philip
Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775), Pierre
Van Cortlandt, William
Livingston, Philip
John Schuyler, Matthew
Clarkson (1733-1800), Stephen
John Schuyler, Henry
Walter Livingston and Peter
Gansevoort; second cousin four times removed of Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870) and Bronson
Murray Cutting; second cousin five times removed of Brockholst
Livingston; third cousin of Nicholas
Bayard, Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, Philip
Van Cortlandt, Henry
Brockholst Livingston, Matthew
Clarkson (1758-1825), Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr. and James
Parker; third cousin once removed of Peter
Augustus Jay, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, William
Jay, Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873), Hamilton
Fish, George
Washington Schuyler, John
Cortlandt Parker and Philip
N. Schuyler; third cousin twice removed of Gilbert
Livingston Thompson, William
Duer, Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard, John
Jay II, James
Adams Ekin, Eugene
Schuyler, Richard
Wayne Parker, Nicholas
Fish, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936) and Charles
Wolcott Parker; third cousin thrice removed of Henry
Newton Schuyler, John
Sluyter Wirt, John
Kean, Hamilton
Fish Kean, Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright, Karl
Cortlandt Schuyler and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991); fourth cousin of Barent
Van Buren and Martin
Van Buren; fourth cousin once removed of John
Van Buren. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
James Armstrong (1748-1828) —
of Pennsylvania.
Born in Carlisle, Cumberland
County, Pa., August
29, 1748.
Physician;
U.S.
Representative from Pennsylvania 6th District, 1793-95; county
judge in Pennsylvania, 1808-28.
Slaveowner.
Died in Carlisle, Cumberland
County, Pa., May 6,
1828 (age 79 years, 251
days).
Interment at Old
Carlisle Cemetery, Carlisle, Pa.
|
|
Philip Van Cortlandt (1749-1831) —
of Croton, Westchester
County, N.Y.
Born in New York, New York
County, N.Y., August
21, 1749.
Democrat. Civil
engineer; colonel in the Continental Army during the
Revolutionary War; delegate
to New York convention to ratify U.S. constitution from
Westchester County, 1788; member of New York
state assembly from Westchester County, 1788-90; member of New York
state senate Southern District, 1790-93; member of New York
council of appointment, 1792; U.S.
Representative from New York, 1793-1809 (3rd District 1793-1803,
4th District 1803-09).
Slaveowner.
Died in Westchester
County, N.Y., November
21, 1831 (age 82 years, 92
days).
Interment at Hillside
Cemetery, Cortlandt town, Westchester County, N.Y.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Pierre
Van Cortlandt and Joanna (Livingston) Van Cortlandt; brother of
Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr.; nephew of Robert
Gilbert Livingston and Henry
Gilbert Livingston; grandson of Gilbert
Livingston; grandnephew of John
Livingston and Robert
Livingston (1688-1775); great-grandson of Stephanus
Van Cortlandt, Robert
Livingston the Elder and Abraham
de Peyster; great-grandnephew of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724), Jacobus
Van Cortlandt, Johannes
de Peyster and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); first cousin once removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Philip
Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775), William
Livingston, Philip
John Schuyler, Stephen
John Schuyler and Hamilton
Fish (1808-1893); first cousin twice removed of Robert
Livingston the Younger, Johannes
DePeyster, Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746), Gilbert
Livingston Thompson, Nicholas
Fish and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936); first cousin thrice removed of David
Davidse Schuyler, Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler, Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991); first cousin four times removed of Guy
Vernor Henry, Montgomery
Schuyler Jr. and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996); first cousin five times removed of Hamilton
Fish (born 1951) and Alexa
Fish Ward; second cousin of Nicholas
Bayard, Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792), Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), Henry
Brockholst Livingston, Edward
Livingston (1764-1836), Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler and James
Parker; second cousin once removed of James
Jay, Matthew
Clarkson, Philip
P. Schuyler, Henry
Rutgers, John
Jay, Frederick
Jay, Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Henry
Walter Livingston, Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843), Rensselaer
Westerlo, Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, Philip
Schuyler, James
Alexander Hamilton, William
Jay, Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873) and John
Cortlandt Parker; second cousin twice removed of Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Edward
Livingston (1796-1840), William
Duer, Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard, Denning
Duer, John
Jay II, James
Adams Ekin, John
Jacob Astor III, Richard
Wayne Parker and Charles
Wolcott Parker; second cousin thrice removed of Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer, William
Waldorf Astor, Robert
Ray Hamilton, John
Sluyter Wirt, John
Kean, Hamilton
Fish Kean and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870); second cousin four times removed
of Herbert
Livingston Satterlee, William
Astor Chanler, Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler, Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933), Peter
Goelet Gerry, Helen
Roosevelt Robinson, Ogden
Livingston Mills, John
Eliot Thayer Jr., Robert
Reginald Livingston, Bronson
Murray Cutting, Robert
Winthrop Kean, Brockholst
Livingston, Marietta
Peabody Tree and Endicott
Peabody; second cousin five times removed of Thomas
Howard Kean; third cousin of Volkert
Petrus Douw, Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Hendrick
Kiliaen Van Rensselaer, James
Livingston, John
Stevens III, Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Killian
Killian Van Rensselaer and Philip
DePeyster; third cousin once removed of Leonard
Gansevoort, Leonard
Gansevoort Jr., Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Maturin
Livingston, George
Washington Schuyler and Philip
N. Schuyler; third cousin twice removed of Peter
Gansevoort, Gerrit
Smith, Elizabeth
Cady Stanton and Eugene
Schuyler; third cousin thrice removed of Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer and Karl
Cortlandt Schuyler. |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Chapin-Fish
family of New York City, New York (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Wikipedia article — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
John Stevens III (1749-1838) —
Born in New York, New York
County, N.Y., June 26,
1749.
Lawyer;
inventor;
New
Jersey state treasurer, 1776-79; colonel in the Continental Army
during the Revolutionary War; successfully advocated for the first
U.S. patent law (1790); innovated steam-powered ships and
locomotives; built railroads
in New Jersey.
Member, American
Philosophical Society.
Died in Bergen Township, Bergen County (part now in Hoboken, Hudson
County), N.J., March 6,
1838 (age 88 years, 253
days).
Burial location unknown.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of John
Stevens and Elizabeth (Alexander) Stevens; brother of Mary
Stevens (who married Robert
R. Livingston); married, October
17, 1782, to Rachel Cox; grandson of James
Alexander; great-grandnephew of Abraham
de Peyster and Johannes
de Peyster; second great-granduncle of Robert
Reginald Livingston; first cousin of Philip
Peter Livingston; first cousin once removed of William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer and Charles
Ludlow Livingston; first cousin twice removed of Johannes
DePeyster, William
Duer and Denning
Duer; first cousin thrice removed of Nicholas
Fish, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936), John
Kean and Hamilton
Fish Kean; first cousin four times removed of Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991) and Robert
Winthrop Kean; first cousin five times removed of Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996) and Thomas
Howard Kean; first cousin six times removed of Hamilton
Fish, Alexa
Fish Ward and Thomas
Howard Kean Jr.; second cousin once removed of Pierre
Van Cortlandt, Matthew
Clarkson and Henry
Rutgers; third cousin of Philip
Van Cortlandt, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr. and Philip
DePeyster. |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Livingston-Duer
family of New York City, New York (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | The World War II Liberty
ship SS John Stevens (built 1942 at Richmond,
California; scrapped 1962) was named for
him. |
|  | See also Wikipedia article — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Thomas Tillotson (1750-1832) —
of Red Hook, Dutchess
County, N.Y.
Born in Maryland, 1750.
Physician;
member of New York
state assembly from Dutchess County, 1787-88, 1789-90; member of
New
York state senate Middle District, 1790-99; member of New York
council of appointment, 1791; U.S.
Representative from New York 5th District, 1801; secretary
of state of New York, 1801-06, 1807-08.
Died in Rhinebeck, Dutchess
County, N.Y., May 5,
1832 (age about 81
years).
Entombed at Rhinebeck
Reformed Dutch Church, Rhinebeck, N.Y.
|
|
Leonard Gansevoort (1751-1810) —
also known as Leendert Harmense Gansevoort —
of Albany, Albany
County, N.Y.
Born in Albany, Albany
County, N.Y., July 14,
1751.
Colonel in the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War; member
of New York
state assembly from Albany County, 1778-79, 1787-88; Delegate
to Continental Congress from New York, 1788; member of New York
state senate, 1790-93, 1796-1802 (Western District 1790-93,
Eastern District 1796-98, Western District 1798-99, Eastern District
1799-1802); member of New York
council of appointment, 1797.
Dutch
ancestry.
Died in Albany, Albany
County, N.Y., August
26, 1810 (age 59 years, 43
days).
Original interment in unknown location; reinterment at Albany
Rural Cemetery, Menands, N.Y.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Harmen Gansevoort and Magdalena (Douw) Gansevoort; married, April
10, 1770, to Hester Cuyler; nephew of Volkert
Petrus Douw; uncle of Peter
Gansevoort; second great-grandnephew of Stephanus
Van Cortlandt and Jacobus
Van Cortlandt; first cousin of Leonard
Gansevoort Jr.; first cousin once removed of Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Hendrick
Kiliaen Van Rensselaer and Killian
Killian Van Rensselaer; second cousin of Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer and Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler; second cousin once removed of Philip
P. Schuyler, James
Alexander Hamilton and Philip
Schuyler; second cousin twice removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Pierre
Van Cortlandt, James
Jay, Philip
John Schuyler, Stephen
John Schuyler, John
Jay, Frederick
Jay and Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer; second cousin thrice removed of Robert
Ray Hamilton; second cousin four times removed of John
Eliot Thayer Jr. and John
Hubner II; third cousin of Pieter
Schuyler, Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Stephen
Van Rensselaer and Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer; third cousin once removed of Nicholas
Bayard, Philip
Van Cortlandt, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., Henry
Walter Livingston, James
Parker, Peter
Augustus Jay, William
Jay and Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer; third cousin twice removed of Edward
Livingston, Charles
Pinckney Brown and Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer; fourth cousin of John
Jay II and John
Cortlandt Parker; fourth cousin once removed of James
Adams Ekin, Richard
Wayne Parker and Charles
Wolcott Parker. |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; VanRensselaer-Gansevoort
family of Albany, New York (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Wikipedia article — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
 |
St. George Tucker (1752-1827) —
of Chesterfield
County, Va.
Born in Port Royal, Bermuda,
July
10, 1752.
Lawyer;
colonel in the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War; Chesterfield
County Commonwealth Attorney, 1783-86; judge of Virginia general
court, 1788-1803; judge of
Virginia state supreme court of appeals, 1803-11; U.S.
District Judge for Virginia, 1813-19; U.S.
District Judge for the Eastern District of Virginia, 1819-25;
resigned 1825.
Died in Nelson
County, Va., November
10, 1827 (age 75 years, 123
days).
Burial location unknown.
|
|
Edmund Jenings Randolph (1753-1813) —
of Virginia.
Born in Williamsburg,
Va., August
10, 1753.
Served in the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War; delegate
to Virginia state constitutional convention, 1776; Virginia
state attorney general, 1776-82; Delegate
to Continental Congress from Virginia, 1779-82; Governor of
Virginia, 1786-88; member,
U.S. Constitutional Convention, 1787; member of Virginia
state house of delegates, 1788; U.S.
Attorney General, 1789-94; U.S.
Secretary of State, 1794-95.
Episcopalian.
Member, Freemasons.
Died in Millwood, Clarke
County, Va., September
12, 1813 (age 60 years, 33
days).
Interment at Old
Chapel Cemetery, Millwood, Va.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of John Randolph and Ariana (Jenings) Randolph; married, August
29, 1776, to Elizabeth Nicholas (daughter of Robert
Carter Nicholas; sister of George
Nicholas, Wilson
Cary Nicholas and John
Nicholas); father of Peyton
Randolph (1779-1828); nephew of Peyton
Randolph (1721-1775); grandfather of Edmund
Randolph; grandnephew of Richard
Randolph; great-grandfather of Edmund
Randolph Cocke; second great-grandfather of Francis
Beverley Biddle; first cousin once removed of Richard
Bland; second cousin of Theodorick
Bland, Thomas
Jefferson, Beverley
Randolph and John
Randolph of Roanoke; second cousin once removed of John
Marshall, Henry
Lee, Charles
Lee, Richard
Bland Lee, James
Markham Marshall, Thomas
Mann Randolph Jr., Alexander
Keith Marshall, Edmund
Jennings Lee, Martha
Jefferson Randolph, Dabney
Carr and Henry
St. George Tucker; second cousin twice removed of Thomas
Marshall, James
Keith Marshall, Francis
Wayles Eppes, Dabney
Smith Carr, Benjamin
Franklin Randolph, Meriwether
Lewis Randolph, George
Wythe Randolph, Nathaniel
Beverly Tucker, Carter
Henry Harrison and John
Breckinridge Castleman; second cousin thrice removed of Thomas
Jefferson Coolidge, Fitzhugh
Lee, William
Henry Fitzhugh Lee, John
Augustine Marshall, Carter
Henry Harrison II and Frederick
Madison Roberts; second cousin four times removed of John
Gardner Coolidge, Edith
Wilson, William
Marshall Bullitt and Alexander
Scott Bullitt; second cousin five times removed of William
Welby Beverley; third cousin once removed of John
Wayles Eppes; third cousin twice removed of Coleby
Chew; third cousin thrice removed of St.
Clair Ballard, Lewis
Ballard and William
Henry Robertson. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | Randolph County,
Ill. is named for him. |
|  | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — National
Governors Association biography — Wikipedia
article — NNDB
dossier — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|  | Books about Edmund Jenings Randolph:
John J. Reardon, Edmund
Randolph : A Biography |
|
|
George Nicholas (1753-1799) —
of Albemarle
County, Va.
Born in Williamsburg,
Va., August
11, 1753.
Colonel in the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War; member
of Virginia
state house of delegates, 1781; delegate
to Virginia convention to ratify U.S. constitution from Albemarle
County, 1788; U.S.
Attorney for Kentucky, 1789, 1793; delegate
to Kentucky state constitutional convention, 1792; Kentucky
state attorney general, 1792.
Died in Lexington, Fayette
County, Ky., July 25,
1799 (age 45 years, 348
days).
Interment at Old
Episcopal Cemetery, Lexington, Ky.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Robert
Carter Nicholas (1729-1780) and Ann (Cary) Nicholas; brother of
Elizabeth Nicholas (who married Edmund
Jenings Randolph), Wilson
Cary Nicholas and John
Nicholas; married to Mary Smith; father of Robert
Carter Nicholas (1787-1857) and Henrietta Morrison Nicholas (who
married Richard
Hawes); uncle of Peyton
Randolph; granduncle of Peter
Myndert Dox and Edmund
Randolph; great-grandfather of Harry
Bartow Hawes; great-granduncle of Edmund
Randolph Cocke; second great-granduncle of Francis
Beverley Biddle; first cousin once removed of Benjamin
Harrison (1726-1791) and William
Fitzhugh; first cousin twice removed of Thomas
Marshall and James
Keith Marshall; second cousin of Carter
Bassett Harrison and William
Henry Harrison (1773-1841); second cousin once removed of John
Scott Harrison (1804-1878); second cousin twice removed of Carter
Henry Harrison, Benjamin
Harrison (1833-1901), William
Henry Fitzhugh Lee, John
Breckinridge Castleman and John
Scott Harrison (1844-1926); second cousin thrice removed of Connally
Findlay Trigg, Russell
Benjamin Harrison, Carter
Henry Harrison II, Richard
Evelyn Byrd and William
Welby Beverley; second cousin four times removed of Harry
Flood Byrd and William
Henry Harrison (1896-1990); second cousin five times removed of
Harry
Flood Byrd Jr.; third cousin of Burwell
Bassett; third cousin twice removed of Montgomery
Blair and Francis
Preston Blair Jr.; third cousin thrice removed of James
Lawrence Blair, Francis
Preston Blair Lee and Gist
Blair. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | Nicholas County,
Ky. is named for him. |
|  | The city
of Nicholasville,
Kentucky, is named for
him. |
|  | See also Wikipedia
article |
|
|
John Ten Eyck Lansing Jr. (b. 1754) —
also known as John Lansing, Jr. —
of Albany, Albany
County, N.Y.
Born in Albany, Albany
County, N.Y., January
30, 1754.
Lawyer;
member of New York
state assembly from Albany County, 1780-84, 1785-87, 1788-89; Speaker of
the New York State Assembly, 1786; Delegate
to Continental Congress from New York, 1785; mayor of
Albany, N.Y., 1786-90; member,
U.S. Constitutional Convention, 1787; delegate
to New York convention to ratify U.S. constitution from Albany
County, 1788; Justice of
New York Supreme Court, 1790-1801.
Christian
Reformed.
Mysteriously
disappeared in New York City, December 12, 1829, after leaving
his hotel to post a letter; his fate is
unknown.
Cenotaph at Albany
Rural Cemetery, Menands, N.Y.
|
 |
Morgan Lewis (1754-1844) —
of New York, New York
County, N.Y.; Rhinebeck, Dutchess
County, N.Y.
Born in New York, New York
County, N.Y., October
16, 1754.
Served in the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War; lawyer;
member of New York
state assembly, 1789-90, 1791-92 (New York County 1789-90,
Dutchess County 1791-92); New York
state attorney general, 1791-92; appointed 1791; Justice of
New York Supreme Court, 1792-1801; Governor of
New York, 1804-07; member of New York
state senate Middle District, 1810-14; general in the U.S. Army
during the War of 1812.
Member, Society
of the Cincinnati; Freemasons.
Died in New York, New York
County, N.Y., April 7,
1844 (age 89 years, 174
days).
Interment at St.
James Episcopal Churchyard, Hyde Park, N.Y.
|
|
Beverley Randolph (1754-1797) —
of Virginia.
Born in Henrico
County, Va., 1754.
Served in the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War; member
of Virginia
state house of delegates, 1777-80; Governor of
Virginia, 1788-91.
Died in Cumberland
County, Va., February
7, 1797 (age about 42
years).
Interment at Westview
Cemetery, Farmville, Va.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Peter Randolph and Lucille (Bolling) Randolph; married, February
14, 1775, to Martha Cocke; nephew of Benjamin
Harrison (1726-1791); grandnephew of Richard
Randolph; great-granduncle of William
Henry Fitzhugh Lee; third great-granduncle of William
Welby Beverley; first cousin of William
Henry Harrison; first cousin once removed of Richard
Bland, Peyton
Randolph (1721-1775), John
Wayles Eppes and John
Scott Harrison; first cousin twice removed of John
Robertson, Francis
Wayles Eppes and Benjamin
Harrison (1833-1901); first cousin thrice removed of Douglass
Townshend Bolling; first cousin four times removed of Thomas
Lawton Davis, Connally
Findlay Trigg and Richard
Walker Bolling; second cousin of Theodorick
Bland, Thomas
Jefferson, Edmund
Jenings Randolph and John
Randolph of Roanoke; second cousin once removed of John
Marshall, Henry
Lee, Charles
Lee, Richard
Bland Lee, James
Markham Marshall, Thomas
Mann Randolph Jr., Alexander
Keith Marshall, Edmund
Jennings Lee, Martha
Jefferson Randolph, Dabney
Carr, Peyton
Randolph (1779-1828) and Henry
St. George Tucker; second cousin twice removed of Thomas
Marshall, Benjamin
William Sheridan Cabell, James
Keith Marshall, Dabney
Smith Carr, Benjamin
Franklin Randolph, Meriwether
Lewis Randolph, George
Wythe Randolph, Nathaniel
Beverly Tucker, Edmund
Randolph, Carter
Henry Harrison and John
Breckinridge Castleman; second cousin thrice removed of William
Lewis Cabell, Thomas
Jefferson Coolidge, Fitzhugh
Lee, George
Craighead Cabell, Edmund
Randolph Cocke, John
Augustine Marshall, Carter
Henry Harrison II and Frederick
Madison Roberts; second cousin four times removed of Joel
Walker Flood, Benjamin
Earl Cabell, John
Gardner Coolidge, Edith
Wilson, William
Marshall Bullitt, Alexander
Scott Bullitt and Francis
Beverley Biddle; second cousin five times removed of Henry
De La Warr Flood, Joel
West Flood and Earle
Cabell; third cousin twice removed of Coleby
Chew; third cousin thrice removed of St.
Clair Ballard, Lewis
Ballard and William
Henry Robertson. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also National
Governors Association biography — Wikipedia
article — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Leonard Gansevoort Jr. (1754-1834) —
of Albany, Albany
County, N.Y.
Born June 3,
1754.
Lawyer;
member of New York
state assembly from Albany County, 1794-95.
Dutch
ancestry.
Died December
16, 1834 (age 80 years, 196
days).
Interment at Albany
Rural Cemetery, Menands, N.Y.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Johannes Gansevoort and Maria (Douw) Gansevoort; married 1777 to Maria
Van Rensselaer; nephew of Volkert
Petrus Douw; second great-grandnephew of Stephanus
Van Cortlandt and Jacobus
Van Cortlandt; first cousin of Leonard
Gansevoort; first cousin once removed of Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Hendrick
Kiliaen Van Rensselaer, Killian
Killian Van Rensselaer and Peter
Gansevoort; second cousin of Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer and Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler; second cousin once removed of Philip
P. Schuyler, James
Alexander Hamilton and Philip
Schuyler; second cousin twice removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Pierre
Van Cortlandt, James
Jay, Philip
John Schuyler, Stephen
John Schuyler, John
Jay, Frederick
Jay and Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer; second cousin thrice removed of Robert
Ray Hamilton; second cousin four times removed of John
Eliot Thayer Jr. and John
Hubner II; third cousin of Pieter
Schuyler, Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Stephen
Van Rensselaer and Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer; third cousin once removed of Nicholas
Bayard, Philip
Van Cortlandt, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., Henry
Walter Livingston, James
Parker, Peter
Augustus Jay, William
Jay and Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer; third cousin twice removed of Edward
Livingston, Charles
Pinckney Brown and Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer; fourth cousin of John
Jay II and John
Cortlandt Parker; fourth cousin once removed of James
Adams Ekin, Richard
Wayne Parker and Charles
Wolcott Parker. |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; VanRensselaer-Gansevoort
family of Albany, New York (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|
 |
John Marshall (1755-1835) —
of Virginia.
Born in Germantown, Fauquier
County, Va., September
24, 1755.
Served in the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War; lawyer;
member of Virginia
state house of delegates, 1782-96; U.S.
Attorney for Virginia, 1789; U.S.
Representative from Virginia at-large, 1799-1800; U.S.
Secretary of State, 1800-01; Chief
Justice of U.S. Supreme Court, 1801-35; died in office 1835;
received 4 electoral votes for Vice-President, 1816.
Episcopalian.
Scottish
ancestry. Member, Freemasons;
Phi
Beta Kappa.
Elected to the Hall
of Fame for Great Americans in 1900.
Slaveowner.
Died in Philadelphia, Philadelphia
County, Pa., July 6,
1835 (age 79 years, 285
days).
Interment at Shockoe
Hill Cemetery, Richmond, Va.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Thomas Marshall (1730-1802) and Mary Randolph (Keith) Marshall;
brother-in-law of William
McClung, George
Keith Taylor and Joseph
Hamilton Daviess; brother of James
Markham Marshall and Alexander
Keith Marshall (1770-1825); married, January
3, 1783, to Mary Willis Ambler (daughter of Jacquelin
Ambler); father of Thomas
Marshall (1784-1835), Mary Marshall (who married Jacquelin
Burwell Harvie) and James
Keith Marshall; uncle and first cousin once removed of Thomas
Alexander Marshall; uncle of Edward
Colston, Thomas
Francis Marshall, Alexander
Keith Marshall (1808-1884), Alexander
Keith McClung, Charles
Alexander Marshall and Edward
Colston Marshall; granduncle by marriage of Humphrey
Marshall (1812-1872); granduncle of John
Augustine Marshall; great-grandfather of Lewis
Minor Coleman; great-grandnephew of Richard
Randolph; great-granduncle of Hudson
Snowden Marshall, William
Marshall Bullitt and Alexander
Scott Bullitt; first cousin and brother-in-law of Humphrey
Marshall (1760-1841); first cousin once removed of William
Marshall Anderson and Charles
Anderson; first cousin twice removed of Richard
Bland and Peyton
Randolph (1721-1775); second cousin of Thomas
Mann Randolph Jr.; second cousin once removed of Theodorick
Bland, Thomas
Jefferson, Edmund
Jenings Randolph, Beverley
Randolph, John
Randolph of Roanoke, Benjamin
Franklin Randolph, Meriwether
Lewis Randolph and George
Wythe Randolph; second cousin twice removed of Thomas
Jefferson Coolidge; second cousin thrice removed of John
Gardner Coolidge; third cousin of Henry
Lee, Charles
Lee, Richard
Bland Lee, Edmund
Jennings Lee, Martha
Jefferson Randolph, Dabney
Carr, Peyton
Randolph (1779-1828) and Henry
St. George Tucker; third cousin once removed of Francis
Wayles Eppes, Dabney
Smith Carr, Edmund
Randolph, Nathaniel
Beverly Tucker, Carter
Henry Harrison and John
Breckinridge Castleman; third cousin twice removed of Fitzhugh
Lee, William
Henry Fitzhugh Lee, Edmund
Randolph Cocke, Carter
Henry Harrison II and Frederick
Madison Roberts; third cousin thrice removed of Edith
Wilson and Francis
Beverley Biddle; fourth cousin of John
Wayles Eppes. |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Tuck-Marshall
family of Annapolis, Maryland; Anderson-Marshall
family (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | Marshall counties in Ala., Ill., Ind., Iowa, Ky., Miss., Tenn. and W.Va. are
named for him. |
|  | The World War II Liberty
ship SS John Marshall (built 1941-42 at Mobile,
Alabama; scrapped 1971) was named for
him. |
|  | Other politicians named for him: John
Marshall Stone
— John
Marshall Martin
— John
Marshall Harlan
— John
M. Clark
— J.
Marshall Hagans
— John
M. Claiborne
— John
M. Hamilton
— John
M. Raymond
— John M.
Rose
— John
M. Slaton
— John
Marshall Quintero
— John
M. Wolverton
— John
M. Robsion
— John
Marshall Hutcheson
— John
M. Butler
— John
Marshall Harlan
— John
M. Robsion, Jr.
— John
Marshall Briley
— John
Marshall Lindley
|
|  | Coins and currency: His portrait
appeared on the $20 U.S. Treasury note in the 1880s, and on the
$500 bill in the early 20th century. |
|  | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — federal
judicial profile — Wikipedia
article — NNDB
dossier — Find-A-Grave
memorial — Biographical
Directory of Federal Judges |
|  | Books about John Marshall: Jean Edward
Smith, John
Marshall : Definer of a Nation — Charles F. Hobson, The
Great Chief Justice : John Marshall and the Rule of
Law — Albert J. Beveridge, The
Life of John Marshall: The Building of the Nation
1815-1835 — Albert J. Beveridge, The
Life of John Marshall: Conflict and Construction
1800-1815 — Albert J. Beveridge, The
Life of John Marshall: Politician, Diplomatist, Statesman
1789-1801 — Albert J. Beveridge, The
Life of John Marshall: Frontiersman, Soldier,
Lawmaker — David Scott Robarge, A
Chief Justice's Progress: John Marshall from Revolutionary Virginia
to the Supreme Court — R. Kent Newmyer, John
Marshall and the Heroic Age of the Supreme Court |
|  | Image source: New York Public
Library |
|
|
Carter Bassett Harrison (c.1756-1808) —
of Virginia.
Born in Charles
City County, Va., about 1756.
Member of Virginia
state house of delegates, 1784-86, 1805-08; U.S.
Representative from Virginia, 1793-99 (13th District 1793-97,
at-large 1797-99).
Died in Prince
George County, Va., April
18, 1808 (age about 52
years).
Burial location unknown.
|
|
Henry Lee (1756-1818) —
also known as "Light Horse Harry" —
of Westmoreland
County, Va.
Born in Prince
William County, Va., January
29, 1756.
Served in the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War; Delegate
to Continental Congress from Virginia, 1786-88; delegate
to Virginia convention to ratify U.S. constitution from
Westmoreland County, 1788; Governor of
Virginia, 1791-94; U.S.
Representative from Virginia at-large, 1799-1801.
Eulogized George
Washington as "First in war, first in peace, and first in the
hearts of his countrymen.".
Slaveowner.
Died in Cumberland Island, Camden
County, Ga., March
25, 1818 (age 62 years, 55
days).
Original interment at a private or family graveyard, Camden County, Ga.; reinterment
in 1913 at University
Chapel, Lexington, Va.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Henry Lee (1730-1787) and Lucy (Grymes) Lee; brother of Charles
Lee, Richard
Bland Lee and Edmund
Jennings Lee; married 1782 to
Matilda Ludwell Lee; married, June 18,
1793, to Ann Hill Carter; father of Robert E. Lee; grandfather of
Fitzhugh
Lee and William
Henry Fitzhugh Lee; grandnephew of Richard
Bland; great-grandnephew of Richard
Randolph; third great-granduncle of Lee
Marvin; first cousin once removed of Richard
Henry Lee, Francis
Lightfoot Lee, Arthur
Lee and Theodorick
Bland (1742-1790); first cousin twice removed of Peyton
Randolph (1721-1775); second cousin of Thomas
Sim Lee, John
Randolph of Roanoke and Henry
St. George Tucker; second cousin once removed of Thomas
Jefferson, Edmund
Jenings Randolph, Beverley
Randolph, John
Lee and Nathaniel
Beverly Tucker; second cousin twice removed of Francis
Preston Blair Lee; second cousin thrice removed of John
Lee Carroll and Edward
Brooke Lee; second cousin four times removed of William
Welby Beverley, Blair
Lee III and Edward
Brooke Lee Jr.; second cousin five times removed of Outerbridge
Horsey; third cousin of John
Marshall, James
Markham Marshall, Thomas
Mann Randolph Jr., Alexander
Keith Marshall, Martha
Jefferson Randolph, Dabney
Carr, Theodorick
Bland (1776-1846), Peyton
Randolph (1779-1828) and Zachary
Taylor; third cousin once removed of Thomas
Marshall, James
Keith Marshall, Francis
Wayles Eppes, Dabney
Smith Carr, Benjamin
Franklin Randolph, Meriwether
Lewis Randolph, George
Wythe Randolph, Thomas
Leonidas Crittenden, Edmund
Randolph, Carter
Henry Harrison and John
Breckinridge Castleman; third cousin twice removed of Hancock
Lee Jackson, Thomas
Jefferson Coolidge, Edmund
Randolph Cocke, John
Augustine Marshall, Carter
Henry Harrison II and Frederick
Madison Roberts; third cousin thrice removed of Abraham
Lincoln, John
Gardner Coolidge, James
Sansome Lakin, Elliot
Woolfolk Major, Edgar
Bailey Woolfolk, Edith
Wilson, William
Marshall Bullitt, Alexander
Scott Bullitt and Francis
Beverley Biddle; fourth cousin of John
Wayles Eppes. |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Lee-Mason
family of Virginia; Lee
family of Silver Spring, Maryland (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | Lee County,
Va. is named for him. |
|  | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — National Governors
Association biography — Wikipedia
article |
|
|
John Kean (1756-1795) —
of South Carolina.
Born in Charleston, Charleston
County, S.C., 1756.
Delegate
to Continental Congress from South Carolina, 1785-87.
Died in Philadelphia, Philadelphia
County, Pa., May 4,
1795 (age about 38
years).
Interment at St.
John's Churchyard, Philadelphia, Pa.
|
 |
Alexander Hamilton (1757-1804) —
also known as "Alexander the
Coppersmith" —
of New York, New York
County, N.Y.
Born in Charles Town, Nevis,
January
11, 1757.
Served in the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War; lawyer; Delegate
to Continental Congress from New York, 1782-83; member of New York
state assembly from New York County, 1786-87; member,
U.S. Constitutional Convention, 1787; delegate
to New York convention to ratify U.S. constitution from New York
County, 1788; U.S.
Secretary of the Treasury, 1789-95.
Episcopalian.
Scottish
and French
ancestry. Member, Freemasons;
Society
of the Cincinnati.
Elected to the Hall
of Fame for Great Americans in 1915.
Shot
and mortally
wounded in a duel with
Aaron
Burr, on July 11, 1804, and died the next day in New York, New York
County, N.Y., July 12,
1804 (age 47 years, 183
days).
Interment at Trinity
Churchyard, Manhattan, N.Y.; statue at Treasury
Building Grounds, Washington, D.C.; statue at Commonwealth Avenue Mall, Boston, Mass.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of James Hamilton and Rachel (Faucette) Hamilton; married, December
14, 1780, to Elizabeth Schuyler (daughter of Philip
John Schuyler; sister of Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler); father of Alexander
Hamilton Jr., James
Alexander Hamilton and William
Stephen Hamilton; great-grandfather of Robert
Ray Hamilton; second great-grandfather of Laurens
M. Hamilton; ancestor *** of Robert
Hamilton Woodruff. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | Cross-reference: Nathaniel
Pendleton — Robert
Troup — John
Tayler — William
P. Van Ness |
|  | Hamilton counties in Fla., Ill., Ind., Kan., Neb., N.Y., Ohio and Tenn. are
named for him. |
|  | The city
of Hamilton,
Ohio, is named for
him. — Hamilton Hall (dormitory, built 1926), at
Harvard University
Business School, Boston,
Massachusetts, is named for
him. |
|  | Other politicians named for him: Alexander
H. Buell
— Alexander
H. Holley
— Hamilton
Fish
— Alexander
H. Stephens
— Alexander
H. Bullock
— Alexander
H. Bailey
— Alexander
H. Rice
— Alexander
H. Wallis
— Alexander
Hamilton Jones
— Alexander
H. Waterman
— Alexander
H. Coffroth
— Alexander
H. Dudley
— Alexander
H. Revell
— Alexander
Hamilton Hargis
— Alexander
Hamilton Phillips
— Alex
Woodle
|
|  | Coins and currency: His portrait
appears on the U.S. $10 bill; from the 1860s to the 1920s, his
portrait also appeared on U.S. notes and certificates of various
denominations from $2 to $1,000. |
|  | Personal motto: "Do it better
yet." |
|  | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Wikipedia
article — NNDB
dossier — Find-A-Grave
memorial — Historical
Society of the New York Courts |
|  | Books about Alexander Hamilton: Richard
Brookhiser, Alexander
Hamilton, American — Forrest McDonald, Alexander
Hamilton: A Biography — Gertrude Atherton, Conqueror
: Dramatized Biography of Alexander Hamilton — Ron
Chernow, Alexander
Hamilton — Thomas Fleming, Duel:
Alexander Hamilton, Aaron Burr, and the Future of
America — Arnold A. Rogow, A
Fatal Friendship: Alexander Hamilton and Aaron Burr —
Willard Sterne Randall, Alexander
Hamilton: A Life — John Harper, American
Machiavelli : Alexander Hamilton and the Origins of U.S. Foreign
Policy — Stephen F. Knott, Alexander
Hamilton and the Persistence of Myth — Charles Cerami,
Young
Patriots: The Remarkable Story of Two Men. Their Impossible Plan and
The Revolution That Created The Constitution — Donald
Barr Chidsey, Mr.
Hamilton and Mr. Jefferson |
|  | Critical books about Alexander
Hamilton: Thomas DiLorenzo, Hamilton's
Curse : How Jefferson's Arch Enemy Betrayed the American Revolution
-- and What It means for Americans Today |
|  | Image source: U.S. postage stamp
(1957) |
|
|
Henry Brockholst Livingston (1757-1823) —
also known as Brockholst Livingston —
of New York, New York
County, N.Y.
Born in New York, New York
County, N.Y., November
25, 1757.
Member of New York
state assembly from New York County, 1788-89, 1800-02; Associate
Justice of U.S. Supreme Court, 1806-23.
Presbyterian.
Member, Society
of the Cincinnati.
Died in Washington,
D.C., March
18, 1823 (age 65 years, 113
days).
Original interment at Trinity
Churchyard, Manhattan, N.Y.; reinterment at Green-Wood
Cemetery, Brooklyn, N.Y.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Susannah (French) Livingston and William
Livingston; brother of Susannah Livingston (who married John
Cleves Symmes) and Sarah Van Brugh Livingston (who married John
Jay); married 1774 to Ann
Ludlow; nephew of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston and Philip
Livingston; uncle of Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843) and William
Jay; grandfather of Henry
Brockholst Ledyard; grandnephew of John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775) and Gilbert
Livingston; granduncle of John
Jay II; great-grandson of Robert
Livingston the Elder, Anthony
Brockholls, Pieter
Van Brugh and Phillip
French; great-grandfather of Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870); great-grandnephew of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724), Johannes
Cuyler and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); second great-grandfather of Brockholst
Livingston; second great-granduncle of Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933); first cousin by marriage of James
Duane and William
Duer (1747-1799); first cousin of Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, Catherine Livingston (who married Nicholas
Bayard), Susanna Livingston (who married John
Kean (1756-1795)) and Matthew
Clarkson; first cousin once removed of Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775), Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Henry
Walter Livingston, Rensselaer
Westerlo, Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873); first cousin twice removed of Robert
Livingston the Younger, Cornelis
Cuyler, Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746), John
Cruger Jr., Philip
Schuyler, Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Edward
Livingston (1796-1840), William
Duer (1805-1879), Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer and Denning
Duer; first cousin thrice removed of David
Davidse Schuyler, Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler, Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer, Nicholas
Fish, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936), John
Kean (1852-1914) and Hamilton
Fish Kean; first cousin four times removed of Herbert
Livingston Satterlee, Bronson
Murray Cutting, Robert
Reginald Livingston, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991) and Robert
Winthrop Kean; first cousin five times removed of John
Eliot Thayer Jr., Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996) and Thomas
Howard Kean; first cousin six times removed of Hamilton
Fish (born 1951), Alexa
Fish Ward and Thomas
Howard Kean Jr.; second cousin of Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), Philip
Van Cortlandt, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr. and Edward
Livingston (1764-1836); second cousin once removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Pierre
Van Cortlandt, James
Jay, Philip
John Schuyler, Philip
P. Schuyler, Stephen
John Schuyler, Henry
Cruger, Frederick
Jay and Hamilton
Fish (1808-1893); second cousin twice removed of Gilbert
Livingston Thompson and John
Jacob Astor III; second cousin thrice removed of William
Waldorf Astor and Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright; second cousin four times removed of Guy
Vernor Henry, William
Astor Chanler, Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler, Montgomery
Schuyler Jr., Peter
Goelet Gerry, Helen
Roosevelt Robinson and Ogden
Livingston Mills; third cousin of Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792), James
Livingston, Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler and James
Parker; third cousin once removed of Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Maturin
Livingston, James
Alexander Hamilton, George
Washington Schuyler, John
Cortlandt Parker and Philip
N. Schuyler; third cousin twice removed of Gerrit
Smith, Elizabeth
Cady Stanton, James
Adams Ekin, Eugene
Schuyler, Richard
Wayne Parker and Charles
Wolcott Parker; third cousin thrice removed of Robert
Ray Hamilton, John
Sluyter Wirt, Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer and Karl
Cortlandt Schuyler. |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Livingston-Duer
family of New York City, New York (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also NNDB
dossier |
|
|
John Armstrong Jr. (1758-1843) —
also known as "Old Soldier"; "Monsieur
Tombo" —
of Pennsylvania; Dutchess
County, N.Y.
Born in Carlisle, Cumberland
County, Pa., November
25, 1758.
Republican. Major in Continental Army during the Revolutionary War;
secretary
of the commonwealth of Pennsylvania, 1783-87; Delegate
to Continental Congress from Pennsylvania, 1787-88; U.S.
Senator from New York, 1800-02, 1803-04; U.S. Minister to France, 1804-10; general in the U.S. Army during the War of
1812; U.S.
Secretary of War, 1813-14; blamed
for the British capture of Washington, D.C. in August 1814, and forced to
resign; member of New York
state assembly from Dutchess County, 1825.
Catholic.
Slaveowner.
Died in Red Hook, Dutchess
County, N.Y., April 1,
1843 (age 84 years, 127
days).
Entombed at Rhinebeck
Cemetery, Rhinebeck, N.Y.
|
|
Charles Lee (1758-1815) —
Born in Westmoreland
County, Va., July, 1758.
Lawyer;
U.S.
Collector of Customs at Alexandria, Va., Virginia, 1789; U.S.
Attorney General, 1795-1801; U.S.
Secretary of State, 1800.
Died in Fauquier
County, Va., June 24,
1815 (age 56 years, 0
days).
Interment at Warrenton
Cemetery, Warrenton, Va.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Henry Lee (1730-1787) and Lucy (Grymes) Lee; brother of Henry
Lee (1756-1818), Richard
Bland Lee and Edmund
Jennings Lee; married 1789 to Anne
Lee; married 1809 to
Margaret Scott; grandnephew of Richard
Bland; granduncle of Fitzhugh
Lee and William
Henry Fitzhugh Lee; great-grandnephew of Richard
Randolph; third great-granduncle of Lee
Marvin; first cousin once removed and son-in-law of Richard
Henry Lee; first cousin once removed of Francis
Lightfoot Lee, Arthur
Lee and Theodorick
Bland (1742-1790); first cousin twice removed of Peyton
Randolph (1721-1775); second cousin of Thomas
Sim Lee, John
Randolph of Roanoke and Henry
St. George Tucker; second cousin once removed of Thomas
Jefferson, Edmund
Jenings Randolph, Beverley
Randolph, John
Lee and Nathaniel
Beverly Tucker; second cousin twice removed of Francis
Preston Blair Lee; second cousin thrice removed of John
Lee Carroll and Edward
Brooke Lee; second cousin four times removed of William
Welby Beverley, Blair
Lee III and Edward
Brooke Lee Jr.; second cousin five times removed of Outerbridge
Horsey; third cousin of John
Marshall, James
Markham Marshall, Thomas
Mann Randolph Jr., Alexander
Keith Marshall, Martha
Jefferson Randolph, Dabney
Carr, Theodorick
Bland (1776-1846), Peyton
Randolph (1779-1828) and Zachary
Taylor; third cousin once removed of Thomas
Marshall, James
Keith Marshall, Francis
Wayles Eppes, Dabney
Smith Carr, Benjamin
Franklin Randolph, Meriwether
Lewis Randolph, George
Wythe Randolph, Thomas
Leonidas Crittenden, Edmund
Randolph, Carter
Henry Harrison and John
Breckinridge Castleman; third cousin twice removed of Hancock
Lee Jackson, Thomas
Jefferson Coolidge, Edmund
Randolph Cocke, John
Augustine Marshall, Carter
Henry Harrison II and Frederick
Madison Roberts; third cousin thrice removed of Abraham
Lincoln, John
Gardner Coolidge, James
Sansome Lakin, Elliot
Woolfolk Major, Edgar
Bailey Woolfolk, Edith
Wilson, William
Marshall Bullitt, Alexander
Scott Bullitt and Francis
Beverley Biddle; fourth cousin of John
Wayles Eppes. |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Lee-Mason
family of Virginia; Lee
family of Silver Spring, Maryland (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also Wikipedia article |
|
|
William McClung (1758-1811) —
of Kentucky.
Born in Rockbridge
County, Va., July 12,
1758.
Member of Kentucky
state house of representatives, 1793; U.S.
Attorney for Kentucky, 1794-96; member of Kentucky
state senate, 1796-1800; Judge of U.S. Circuit Court for the 6th
Circuit, 1801-02.
Died in Mason
County, Ky., 1811
(age about
52 years).
Interment in private or family graveyard.
|
|
Matthew Clarkson (1758-1825) —
of New York, New York
County, N.Y.
Born in New York, New York
County, N.Y., October
17, 1758.
General in the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War; member
of New York
state assembly from New York County, 1789-90; member of New York
state senate Southern District, 1793-95; president, Bank of
New York, 1804-25.
Died in New York, New York
County, N.Y., April
25, 1825 (age 66 years, 190
days).
Burial location unknown.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Elizabeth (French) Clarkson and David Clarkson; married, May 25,
1785, to Mary Rutherfurd; married, February
14, 1792, to Sarah Cornell; great-grandson of Anthony
Brockholls and Phillip
French; second great-grandfather of Peter
Augustus Jay; first cousin of Henry
Brockholst Livingston; first cousin once removed of Matthew
Clarkson (1733-1800) and William
Jay; first cousin twice removed of Henry
Brockholst Ledyard and John
Jay II; first cousin thrice removed of Charles
Ludlow Livingston; first cousin four times removed of Brockholst
Livingston; second cousin once removed of James
Jay and Frederick
Jay; third cousin of Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer and James
Livingston; third cousin once removed of Robert
R. Livingston, Edward
Livingston, Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler, Maturin
Livingston and Peter
Gansevoort; third cousin twice removed of Philip
Schuyler, James
Alexander Hamilton, Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Gerrit
Smith and Elizabeth
Cady Stanton; third cousin thrice removed of John
Jacob Astor III and Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also Wikipedia
article |
|
|
Peter Samuel Schuyler (1758-1832) —
also known as Peter S. Schuyler —
of Albany
County, N.Y.
Born in Watervliet, Albany
County, N.Y., May 14,
1758.
Member of New York
state assembly from Albany County, 1801-04, 1819-20.
Died, from apoplexy,
in Watervliet, Albany
County, N.Y., November
1, 1832 (age 74 years, 171
days).
Original interment at a private or family graveyard, Albany County, N.Y.; reinterment
in 1877 at Albany
Rural Cemetery, Menands, N.Y.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Engeltie (Van Vechten) Schuyler and Stephanus Schuyler; married to
Catherina Cuyler; nephew of Philip
P. Schuyler; great-grandson of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724); great-grandnephew of Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); second great-grandnephew of Stephanus
Van Cortlandt and Jacobus
Van Cortlandt; first cousin of Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792); first cousin once removed of Henry
Walter Livingston; first cousin twice removed of John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775), Gilbert
Livingston, Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746) and Edward
Livingston (1796-1840); first cousin thrice removed of David
Davidse Schuyler and Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler; first cousin four times removed of Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870) and Bronson
Murray Cutting; first cousin five times removed of Brockholst
Livingston; second cousin of Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, James
Livingston, Stephen
Van Rensselaer and Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer; second cousin once removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Philip
Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775), Volkert
Petrus Douw, Pierre
Van Cortlandt, William
Livingston, Philip
John Schuyler, Stephen
John Schuyler, Hendrick
Kiliaen Van Rensselaer, Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), Killian
Killian Van Rensselaer, Edward
Livingston (1764-1836), Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler, Maturin
Livingston, Philip
Schuyler and Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer; second cousin twice removed of James
Jay, John
Jay, Frederick
Jay, James
Alexander Hamilton, Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Gerrit
Smith, Elizabeth
Cady Stanton and Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer; second cousin thrice removed of John
Jacob Astor III and Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer; second cousin four times removed of William
Waldorf Astor, Robert
Ray Hamilton, Peter
Goelet Gerry, Ogden
Livingston Mills and John
Eliot Thayer Jr.; second cousin five times removed of William
Astor Chanler, Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler, Helen
Roosevelt Robinson and Robert
Reginald Livingston; third cousin of Nicholas
Bayard, Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, Philip
Van Cortlandt, Leonard
Gansevoort, Leonard
Gansevoort Jr., Henry
Brockholst Livingston, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr. and James
Parker; third cousin once removed of Rensselaer
Westerlo, Peter
Augustus Jay, Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, Peter
Gansevoort, William
Jay, Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873), Hamilton
Fish, George
Washington Schuyler, John
Cortlandt Parker and Philip
N. Schuyler; third cousin twice removed of Gilbert
Livingston Thompson, William
Duer, Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard, John
Jay II, James
Adams Ekin, Eugene
Schuyler, Richard
Wayne Parker, Nicholas
Fish, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936) and Charles
Wolcott Parker; third cousin thrice removed of John
Sluyter Wirt, John
Kean, Hamilton
Fish Kean, Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright, Karl
Cortlandt Schuyler and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991). |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Schuyler
family of Albany, New York (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Nicholas Fish (1758-1833) —
Born in Newtown, Queens, Queens
County, N.Y., August
28, 1758.
Colonel in the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War; Adjutant
General of New York, 1786; Federalist candidate for U.S.
Representative from New York, 1804, 1806; candidate for Lieutenant
Governor of New York, 1810 (Federalist), 1811.
Died June 20,
1833 (age 74 years, 296
days).
Entombed at St.
Mark's-in-the-Bowery Churchyard, Manhattan, N.Y.
|
|
Humphrey Marshall (1760-1841) —
of Kentucky.
Born in Orlean, Fauquier
County, Va., 1760.
Served in the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War; lawyer; delegate
to Virginia convention to ratify U.S. constitution from Fayette
County, 1788; member of Kentucky
state house of representatives, 1793-94, 1807-09; U.S.
Senator from Kentucky, 1795-1801; In 1809, he opposed Henry
Clay's proposal to require all Kentucky legislators to wear
domestic homespun instead of British broadcloth; this clash resulted
in a duel
in which both men were wounded. Author of
the first
history of Kentucky, published in 1812.
Slaveowner.
Died near Lexington, Fayette
County, Ky., July 3,
1841 (age about 81
years).
Interment in private or family graveyard.
|
|
Richard Bland Lee (1761-1827) —
Born in Prince
William County, Va., January
20, 1761.
Member of Virginia state legislature, 1784; U.S.
Representative from Virginia, 1789-95 (at-large 1789-91, 4th
District 1791-93, 17th District 1793-95); judge in District of
Columbia, 1827.
Slaveowner.
Died in Madison
County, Ky., March
12, 1827 (age 66 years, 51
days).
Original interment in private or family graveyard; subsequent
interment at Congressional
Cemetery, Washington, D.C.; reinterment in 1975 at Sully
Plantation, Chantilly, Va.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Henry Lee (1729-1787) and Lucy Ludwell Gaines (Grymes) Lee;
brother of Henry
Lee (1756-1818), Charles
Lee and Edmund
Jennings Lee; married 1794 to
Elizabeth Collins Lee; grandnephew of Richard
Bland; granduncle of Fitzhugh
Lee and William
Henry Fitzhugh Lee; great-grandnephew of Richard
Randolph; third great-grandfather of Lee
Marvin; first cousin once removed of Richard
Henry Lee, Francis
Lightfoot Lee, Arthur
Lee and Theodorick
Bland (1742-1790); first cousin twice removed of Peyton
Randolph (1721-1775); second cousin of Thomas
Sim Lee, John
Randolph of Roanoke and Henry
St. George Tucker; second cousin once removed of Thomas
Jefferson, Edmund
Jenings Randolph, Beverley
Randolph, John
Lee and Nathaniel
Beverly Tucker; second cousin twice removed of Francis
Preston Blair Lee; second cousin thrice removed of John
Lee Carroll and Edward
Brooke Lee; second cousin four times removed of William
Welby Beverley, Blair
Lee III and Edward
Brooke Lee Jr.; second cousin five times removed of Outerbridge
Horsey; third cousin of John
Marshall, James
Markham Marshall, Thomas
Mann Randolph Jr., Alexander
Keith Marshall, Martha
Jefferson Randolph, Dabney
Carr, Theodorick
Bland (1776-1846), Peyton
Randolph (1779-1828) and Zachary
Taylor; third cousin once removed of Thomas
Marshall, James
Keith Marshall, Francis
Wayles Eppes, Dabney
Smith Carr, Benjamin
Franklin Randolph, Meriwether
Lewis Randolph, George
Wythe Randolph, Thomas
Leonidas Crittenden, Edmund
Randolph, Carter
Henry Harrison and John
Breckinridge Castleman; third cousin twice removed of Hancock
Lee Jackson, Thomas
Jefferson Coolidge, Edmund
Randolph Cocke, John
Augustine Marshall, Carter
Henry Harrison II and Frederick
Madison Roberts; third cousin thrice removed of Abraham
Lincoln, John
Gardner Coolidge, Elliot
Woolfolk Major, James
Sansome Lakin, Edgar
Bailey Woolfolk, Edith
Wilson, William
Marshall Bullitt, Alexander
Scott Bullitt and Francis
Beverley Biddle; fourth cousin of John
Wayles Eppes. |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Lee-Mason
family of Virginia; Lee
family of Silver Spring, Maryland (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Wilson Cary Nicholas (1761-1820) —
also known as Wilson C. Nicholas —
of Charlottesville,
Va.
Born in Virginia, January
31, 1761.
Democrat. Member of Virginia
state house of delegates, 1784-88, 1789, 1794-1800; delegate
to Virginia convention to ratify U.S. constitution from Albemarle
County, 1788; U.S.
Senator from Virginia, 1799-1804; U.S.
Representative from Virginia, 1807-09 (21st District 1807-09,
20th District 1809); Governor of
Virginia, 1814-16.
Slaveowner.
Died October
10, 1820 (age 59 years, 253
days).
Interment at Monticello
Graveyard, Near Charlottesville, Albemarle County, Va.
|
|
Pierre Van Cortlandt Jr. (1762-1848) —
of Westchester
County, N.Y.
Born in Croton, Westchester
County, N.Y., August
29, 1762.
Lawyer;
banker;
member of New York
state assembly from Westchester County, 1791-92, 1793-95; U.S.
Representative from New York 3rd District, 1811-13; served in the
U.S. Army during the War of 1812; Whig Presidential Elector for New
York, 1840.
Slaveowner.
Died in Peekskill, Westchester
County, N.Y., July 13,
1848 (age 85 years, 319
days).
Interment at Hillside
Cemetery, Cortlandt town, Westchester County, N.Y.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Pierre
Van Cortlandt and Joanna (Livingston) Van Cortlandt; brother of
Philip
Van Cortlandt; married 1801 to
Catherine Clinton (daughter of George
Clinton); married to Anne Stevenson; nephew of Robert
Gilbert Livingston and Henry
Gilbert Livingston; grandson of Gilbert
Livingston; grandnephew of John
Livingston and Robert
Livingston (1688-1775); great-grandson of Stephanus
Van Cortlandt, Robert
Livingston the Elder and Abraham
de Peyster; great-grandnephew of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724), Jacobus
Van Cortlandt, Johannes
de Peyster and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); first cousin once removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Philip
Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775), William
Livingston, Philip
John Schuyler, Stephen
John Schuyler and Hamilton
Fish (1808-1893); first cousin twice removed of Robert
Livingston the Younger, Johannes
DePeyster, Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746), Gilbert
Livingston Thompson, Nicholas
Fish and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936); first cousin thrice removed of David
Davidse Schuyler, Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler, Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991); first cousin four times removed of Guy
Vernor Henry, Montgomery
Schuyler Jr. and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996); first cousin five times removed of Hamilton
Fish (born 1951) and Alexa
Fish Ward; second cousin of Nicholas
Bayard, Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792), Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), Henry
Brockholst Livingston, Edward
Livingston (1764-1836), Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler and James
Parker; second cousin once removed of James
Jay, Matthew
Clarkson, Philip
P. Schuyler, Henry
Rutgers, John
Jay, Frederick
Jay, Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Henry
Walter Livingston, Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843), Rensselaer
Westerlo, Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, Philip
Schuyler, James
Alexander Hamilton, William
Jay, Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873) and John
Cortlandt Parker; second cousin twice removed of Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Edward
Livingston (1796-1840), William
Duer, Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer, Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard, John
Jay II, James
Adams Ekin, John
Jacob Astor III, Richard
Wayne Parker and Charles
Wolcott Parker; second cousin thrice removed of Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer, William
Waldorf Astor, Robert
Ray Hamilton, John
Sluyter Wirt, John
Kean, Hamilton
Fish Kean and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870); second cousin four times removed
of Herbert
Livingston Satterlee, William
Astor Chanler, Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler, Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933), Peter
Goelet Gerry, Helen
Roosevelt Robinson, Ogden
Livingston Mills, John
Eliot Thayer Jr., Robert
Reginald Livingston, Bronson
Murray Cutting, Robert
Winthrop Kean, Brockholst
Livingston, Marietta
Peabody Tree and Endicott
Peabody; second cousin five times removed of Thomas
Howard Kean; third cousin of Volkert
Petrus Douw, Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Hendrick
Kiliaen Van Rensselaer, James
Livingston, John
Stevens III, Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Killian
Killian Van Rensselaer and Philip
DePeyster; third cousin once removed of Leonard
Gansevoort, Leonard
Gansevoort Jr., Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Maturin
Livingston, George
Washington Schuyler and Philip
N. Schuyler; third cousin twice removed of Peter
Gansevoort, Gerrit
Smith, Elizabeth
Cady Stanton and Eugene
Schuyler; third cousin thrice removed of Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer and Karl
Cortlandt Schuyler. |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Chapin-Fish
family of New York City, New York; Clinton
#1 family of New York (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Wikipedia article — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Killian Killian Van Rensselaer (1763-1845) —
also known as Killian K. Van Rensselaer —
of Albany, Albany
County, N.Y.
Born in Greenbush (now Rensselaer), Rensselaer
County, N.Y., June 5,
1763.
Democrat. U.S.
Representative from New York, 1801-11 (8th District 1801-03, 9th
District 1803-09, 17th District 1809-11).
Slaveowner.
Died June 18,
1845 (age 82 years, 13
days).
Interment in private or family graveyard.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Kiliaen Van Rensselaer (1717-1781) and Ariantje 'Harriet'
(Schuyler) Van Rensselaer; brother of Hendrick
Kiliaen Van Rensselaer; uncle of Solomon
Van Vechten Van Rensselaer; great-grandnephew of Stephanus
Van Cortlandt and Jacobus
Van Cortlandt; third great-granduncle of John
Hubner II; first cousin of Volkert
Petrus Douw, Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer and Robert
Van Rensselaer; first cousin once removed of Leonard
Gansevoort, Leonard
Gansevoort Jr., Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer and Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler; first cousin twice removed of James
Alexander Hamilton, Philip
Schuyler and Peter
Gansevoort; first cousin thrice removed of Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer; first cousin four times removed of Robert
Ray Hamilton; first cousin five times removed of John
Eliot Thayer Jr.; second cousin of Philip
P. Schuyler; second cousin once removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Pierre
Van Cortlandt, James
Jay, Philip
John Schuyler, Stephen
John Schuyler, John
Jay, Pieter
Schuyler, Frederick
Jay, Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Stephen
Van Rensselaer and Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer; second cousin twice removed of Henry
Walter Livingston and Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer; second cousin thrice removed of Edward
Livingston, Charles
Pinckney Brown and Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer (1845-1905); second cousin five times removed of
Charles
Ludlow Livingston and Bronson
Murray Cutting; third cousin of Nicholas
Bayard, Philip
Van Cortlandt, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., James
Parker, Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843) and William
Jay; third cousin once removed of John
Jay II and John
Cortlandt Parker; third cousin twice removed of James
Adams Ekin, Richard
Wayne Parker and Charles
Wolcott Parker; third cousin thrice removed of John
Sluyter Wirt and Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933). |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; VanRensselaer-Gansevoort
family of Albany, New York (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Wikipedia article |
|
|
Burwell Bassett (1764-1841) —
of Williamsburg,
Va.
Born in New Kent
County, Va., March
18, 1764.
Democrat. Member of Virginia
state house of delegates, 1787-89, 1819-21; member of Virginia
state senate, 1794-1805; U.S.
Representative from Virginia, 1805-13, 1815-19, 1821-29 (at-large
1805-07, 12th District 1807-09, 22nd District 1809-11, 12th District
1811-13, 13th District 1815-19, 8th District 1821-29).
Slaveowner.
Died, after a fall from
his horse, in
New Kent
County, Va., February
26, 1841 (age 76 years, 345
days).
Interment at Eltham
Plantation, New Kent County, Va.
|
|
Edward Livingston (1764-1836) —
of New York, New York
County, N.Y.; New Orleans, Orleans
Parish, La.
Born in Clermont, Columbia
County, N.Y., May 28,
1764.
Democrat. U.S.
Representative from New York, 1795-1801 (1st District 1795-99,
2nd District 1799-1801); mayor
of New York City, N.Y., 1801-03; U.S.
Attorney for New York, 1801-03; member of Louisiana
state house of representatives, 1820; U.S.
Representative from Louisiana 1st District, 1823-29; U.S.
Senator from Louisiana, 1829-31; U.S.
Secretary of State, 1831-33; U.S. Minister to France, 1833-35.
Slaveowner.
Died May 23,
1836 (age 71 years, 361
days).
Original interment at a
private or family graveyard, Columbia County, N.Y.; reinterment
somewhere
in Rhinebeck, N.Y.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775) and Margaret (Beekman) Livingston;
brother of Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), Gertrude Livingston (who married Morgan
Lewis) and Alida Livingston (who married John
Armstrong Jr.); married, April
10, 1788, to Mary McEvers; married, June 3,
1805, to Louisa D'Avezac=de=Castera (sister of Auguste
Davezac); uncle of Elizabeth Stevens Livingston (who married Edward
Philip Livingston (1779-1843)); grandson of Robert
Livingston (1688-1775); grandnephew of John
Livingston and Gilbert
Livingston; granduncle of John
Jacob Astor III; great-grandson of Robert
Livingston the Elder and Robert
Livingston the Younger; great-grandnephew of Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); great-granduncle of William
Waldorf Astor; second great-grandson of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724); second great-granduncle of William
Astor Chanler, Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler, Peter
Goelet Gerry, Helen
Roosevelt Robinson, Ogden
Livingston Mills and Robert
Reginald Livingston; first cousin once removed of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Philip
Livingston, William
Livingston, Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer and James
Livingston; first cousin twice removed of Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746) and Philip
P. Schuyler; first cousin thrice removed of David
Davidse Schuyler and Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler; second cousin of Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, Philip
Van Cortlandt, Henry
Brockholst Livingston, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler and Maturin
Livingston; second cousin once removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Pierre
Van Cortlandt, Philip
John Schuyler, Stephen
John Schuyler, Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792), Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Henry
Walter Livingston, Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843), Rensselaer
Westerlo, Edward
Philip Livingston (1779-1843), William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, Philip
Schuyler, James
Alexander Hamilton, Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), William
Jay, Gerrit
Smith, Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873), Hamilton
Fish (1808-1893) and Elizabeth
Cady Stanton; second cousin twice removed of Matthew
Clarkson (1733-1800), Gilbert
Livingston Thompson, Edward
Livingston (1796-1840), William
Duer, Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer, Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard, John
Jay II, Nicholas
Fish, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936) and Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer; second cousin thrice removed of Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Ray Hamilton, John
Kean, Hamilton
Fish Kean, Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright, Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870) and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991); second cousin four times removed of Guy
Vernor Henry, Herbert
Livingston Satterlee, Montgomery
Schuyler Jr., Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933), John
Eliot Thayer Jr., Bronson
Murray Cutting, Robert
Winthrop Kean, Brockholst
Livingston and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996); second cousin five times removed of Thomas
Howard Kean, Hamilton
Fish (born 1951) and Alexa
Fish Ward; third cousin of Nicholas
Bayard and James
Parker; third cousin once removed of Matthew
Clarkson (1758-1825), George
Washington Schuyler, John
Cortlandt Parker and Philip
N. Schuyler; third cousin twice removed of James
Adams Ekin, Eugene
Schuyler, Richard
Wayne Parker and Charles
Wolcott Parker; third cousin thrice removed of John
Sluyter Wirt and Karl
Cortlandt Schuyler; fourth cousin of Peter
Gansevoort. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | Livingston counties in Ill., Mich. and Mo. are
named for him. |
|  | The town
of Livingston,
Guatemala, is named for
him. |
|  | Other politicians named for him: Edward
L. Davis
— Edward
L. Martin
— Edward
L. Taylor, Jr.
— Edward
L. Robertson
|
|  | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Wikipedia article — U.S. State Dept career summary — NNDB
dossier |
|
|
John Nicholas (1764-1819) —
of Williamsburg,
Va.; Geneva, Ontario
County, N.Y.
Born in Williamsburg,
Va., January
19, 1764.
Democrat. U.S.
Representative from Virginia, 1793-1801 (15th District 1793-97,
at-large 1797-1801); member of New York
state senate Western District, 1805-09; common pleas court judge
in New York, 1806-19.
Slaveowner.
Died in Geneva, Ontario
County, N.Y., December
31, 1819 (age 55 years, 346
days).
Interment at Glenwood
Cemetery, Geneva, N.Y.
|
 |
Stephen Van Rensselaer (1764-1839) —
of Albany, Albany
County, N.Y.
Born in New York, New York
County, N.Y., November
1, 1764.
Member of New York
state assembly from Albany County, 1789-90, 1807-10, 1817-18;
member of New York
state senate Western District, 1790-95; member of New York
council of appointment, 1792; Lieutenant
Governor of New York, 1795-1801; general in the U.S. Army during
the War of 1812; candidate for Governor of
New York, 1813; delegate
to New York state constitutional convention, 1821; U.S.
Representative from New York, 1822-29 (9th District 1822-23, 10th
District 1823-29).
Dutch
ancestry. Member, Freemasons.
Albany's last Dutch Patroon; took the first
train ride in U.S.; founded Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.
Slaveowner.
Died in Albany, Albany
County, N.Y., January
26, 1839 (age 74 years, 86
days).
Original interment in private or family graveyard; reinterment at Albany
Rural Cemetery, Menands, N.Y.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Stephen Van Rensselaer (1742-1769) and Catharina (Livingston) Van
Rensselaer; half-brother of Rensselaer
Westerlo and Catherine Westerlo (who married John
Woodworth); brother of Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer; married 1783 to
Margarita Schuyler (daughter of Philip
John Schuyler); married, May 17,
1802, to Cornelia Bell Paterson (daughter of William
Paterson); father of Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer; uncle of Philip
Schuyler; grandson of Philip
Livingston; grandfather of Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer; grandnephew of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston and William
Livingston; great-grandson of Dirck
Ten Broeck; great-grandnephew of John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775) and Gilbert
Livingston; second great-grandson of Stephanus
Van Cortlandt, Robert
Livingston the Elder and Pieter
Van Brugh; second great-grandfather of John
Eliot Thayer Jr.; second great-grandnephew of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724), Jacobus
Van Cortlandt and Johannes
Cuyler; third great-grandson of Dirck
Wesselse Ten Broeck; first cousin of Edward
Philip Livingston; first cousin once removed of Philip
P. Schuyler, Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, James
Livingston, Henry
Brockholst Livingston and Edward
Livingston (1796-1840); first cousin twice removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775), Pierre
Van Cortlandt and Stephen
John Schuyler; first cousin thrice removed of Cornelis
Cuyler, John
Cruger Jr. and Robert
Reginald Livingston; first cousin four times removed of David
Davidse Schuyler and Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler; second cousin of Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792), Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Henry
Walter Livingston, Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843), William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, William
Jay and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873); second cousin once removed of Volkert
Petrus Douw, Nicholas
Bayard, Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Hendrick
Kiliaen Van Rensselaer, Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), Philip
Van Cortlandt, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., Killian
Killian Van Rensselaer, Edward
Livingston (1764-1836), Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler, James
Parker, Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Gerrit
Smith, William
Duer, Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard, Elizabeth
Cady Stanton and John
Jay II; second cousin twice removed of James
Jay, Henry
Cruger, John
Jay, Frederick
Jay, Nicholas
Fish, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936), John
Kean, Hamilton
Fish Kean and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870); second cousin thrice removed of Herbert
Livingston Satterlee, Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933), Bronson
Murray Cutting, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991), Robert
Winthrop Kean and Brockholst
Livingston; second cousin four times removed of Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996) and Thomas
Howard Kean; second cousin five times removed of Hamilton
Fish (born 1951), Alexa
Fish Ward and Thomas
Howard Kean Jr.; third cousin of Leonard
Gansevoort, Leonard
Gansevoort Jr., Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, James
Alexander Hamilton, Peter
Gansevoort, Hamilton
Fish (1808-1893) and John
Cortlandt Parker; third cousin once removed of Gilbert
Livingston Thompson, James
Adams Ekin, John
Jacob Astor III, Richard
Wayne Parker and Charles
Wolcott Parker; third cousin twice removed of William
Waldorf Astor, Robert
Ray Hamilton, John
Sluyter Wirt, Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer and Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright; third cousin thrice removed of Guy
Vernor Henry, William
Astor Chanler, Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler, Montgomery
Schuyler Jr., Peter
Goelet Gerry, Helen
Roosevelt Robinson, Ogden
Livingston Mills, Marietta
Peabody Tree and Endicott
Peabody; fourth cousin of Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Maturin
Livingston, George
Washington Schuyler and Philip
N. Schuyler; fourth cousin once removed of Barent
Van Buren, Martin
Van Buren and Eugene
Schuyler. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Wikipedia article — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|  | Image source: New York Public
Library |
|
|
James Markham Marshall (1764-1848) —
of Kentucky.
Born in Fauquier
County, Va., March
12, 1764.
Delegate
to Kentucky state constitutional convention, 1791; Judge of
Circuit Court of the District of Columbia, 1801-03; resigned 1803.
Died in Fauquier
County, Va., April
26, 1848 (age 84 years, 45
days).
Interment a
private or family graveyard, Warren County, Va.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Thomas Marshall (1730-1802) and Mary Randolph (Keith) Marshall;
brother of John
Marshall and Alexander
Keith Marshall (1770-1825); married, April 9,
1795, to Henrietta 'Hetty' Morris (daughter of Robert
Morris); uncle and first cousin once removed of Thomas
Alexander Marshall; uncle of Thomas
Marshall (1784-1835), Edward
Colston, James
Keith Marshall, Thomas
Francis Marshall, Alexander
Keith Marshall (1808-1884), Charles
Alexander Marshall and Edward
Colston Marshall; grandfather of John
Augustine Marshall; great-grandnephew of Richard
Randolph; great-granduncle of William
Marshall Bullitt and Alexander
Scott Bullitt; first cousin and brother-in-law of Humphrey
Marshall; first cousin twice removed of Richard
Bland and Peyton
Randolph (1721-1775); second cousin of Thomas
Mann Randolph Jr.; second cousin once removed of Theodorick
Bland, Thomas
Jefferson, Edmund
Jenings Randolph, Beverley
Randolph, John
Randolph of Roanoke, Benjamin
Franklin Randolph, Meriwether
Lewis Randolph and George
Wythe Randolph; second cousin twice removed of Thomas
Jefferson Coolidge; second cousin thrice removed of John
Gardner Coolidge; third cousin of Henry
Lee, Charles
Lee, Richard
Bland Lee, Edmund
Jennings Lee, Martha
Jefferson Randolph, Dabney
Carr, Peyton
Randolph (1779-1828) and Henry
St. George Tucker; third cousin once removed of Francis
Wayles Eppes, Dabney
Smith Carr, Edmund
Randolph, Nathaniel
Beverly Tucker, Carter
Henry Harrison and John
Breckinridge Castleman; third cousin twice removed of Fitzhugh
Lee, William
Henry Fitzhugh Lee, Edmund
Randolph Cocke, Carter
Henry Harrison II and Frederick
Madison Roberts; third cousin thrice removed of Edith
Wilson and Francis
Beverley Biddle; fourth cousin of John
Wayles Eppes. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also federal
judicial profile — Biographical
Directory of Federal Judges |
|
|
Peter Robert Livingston (1766-1847) —
also known as Peter R. Livingston —
of Rhinebeck, Dutchess
County, N.Y.
Born in Rhinebeck, Dutchess
County, N.Y., October
3, 1766.
Whig. Lawyer;
member of New York
state senate, 1815-22, 1826-29 (Southern District 1815-22, 2nd
District 1826-29); member of New York
state assembly from Dutchess County, 1823; Speaker of
the New York State Assembly, 1823; Lieutenant
Governor of New York, 1828; delegate to Whig National Convention
from New York, 1839 (Convention Vice-President).
Died in Rhinebeck, Dutchess
County, N.Y., January
19, 1847 (age 80 years, 108
days).
Original interment at Dutch
Reformed Church, Rhinebeck, N.Y.; reinterment to unknown location.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Robert James Livingston and Susanna (Smith) Livingston; brother of
Maturin
Livingston; married to Joanna Livingston; great-grandson of Robert
Livingston the Younger; great-granduncle of Peter
Goelet Gerry and Ogden
Livingston Mills; second great-grandson of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724); second great-grandnephew of Robert
Livingston the Elder and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); first cousin once removed of Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, James
Livingston and Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859); first cousin twice removed of Philip
P. Schuyler; first cousin thrice removed of John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775), Gilbert
Livingston and Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746); first cousin four times removed of David
Davidse Schuyler and Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler; second cousin of Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), Benjamin
Tallmadge, Edward
Livingston (1764-1836), Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer and Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler; second cousin once removed of Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792), Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Philip
Schuyler, James
Alexander Hamilton, Frederick
Augustus Tallmadge, Gerrit
Smith and Elizabeth
Cady Stanton; second cousin twice removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Philip
Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775), Pierre
Van Cortlandt, William
Livingston, Matthew
Clarkson (1733-1800), Philip
John Schuyler, Stephen
John Schuyler, John
Jacob Astor III and Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer; second cousin thrice removed of William
Waldorf Astor, Robert
Ray Hamilton and Charles
Dunsmore Millard; second cousin four times removed of William
Astor Chanler, Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler, Helen
Roosevelt Robinson, John
Eliot Thayer Jr. and Robert
Reginald Livingston; third cousin of Henry
Walter Livingston; third cousin once removed of Nicholas
Bayard, Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, Philip
Van Cortlandt, Henry
Brockholst Livingston, Matthew
Clarkson (1758-1825), Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., James
Parker and Edward
Livingston (1796-1840); third cousin thrice removed of Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870) and Bronson
Murray Cutting; fourth cousin of Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Peter
Augustus Jay, Rensselaer
Westerlo, Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, Peter
Gansevoort, William
Jay, Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873), Hamilton
Fish, George
Washington Schuyler, John
Cortlandt Parker and Philip
N. Schuyler; fourth cousin once removed of Gilbert
Livingston Thompson, William
Duer, Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer, Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard, John
Jay II, James
Adams Ekin, Eugene
Schuyler, Richard
Wayne Parker, Nicholas
Fish, Hamilton
Fish Jr. and Charles
Wolcott Parker. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also Wikipedia
article |
|
|
James Asheton Bayard Sr. (1767-1815) —
also known as "The Chevalier"; "The Goliath
of His Party"; "High Priest of the
Constitution" —
of Wilmington, New Castle
County, Del.
Born in Philadelphia, Philadelphia
County, Pa., July 28,
1767.
Lawyer;
U.S.
Representative from Delaware at-large, 1797-1803; U.S.
Senator from Delaware, 1804-13.
Slaveowner.
Died in Wilmington, New Castle
County, Del., August
6, 1815 (age 48 years, 9
days).
Original interment at a
private or family graveyard, Cecil County, Md.; reinterment in
1842 at Wilmington
and Brandywine Cemetery, Wilmington, Del.
|
|
Jacob Rutsen Van Rensselaer (1767-1835) —
also known as Jacob R. Van Rensselaer —
of Claverack, Columbia
County, N.Y.
Born in Claverack, Columbia
County, N.Y., September
27, 1767.
Lawyer;
member of New York
state assembly from Columbia County, 1799-1800, 1807-09, 1810-16,
1818-19; Speaker of
the New York State Assembly, 1812-13; served in the U.S. Army
during the War of 1812; secretary
of state of New York, 1813-15; delegate
to New York state constitutional convention, 1821.
Died in New York, New York
County, N.Y., September
22, 1835 (age 67 years, 360
days).
Interment at Reformed Dutch Church Cemetery, Claverack, N.Y.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Robert
Van Rensselaer and Cornelia (Rutsen) Van Rensselaer; married to
Cornelia De Peyster; nephew of Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer; great-grandson of Robert
Livingston the Younger; second great-grandson of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724); second great-grandnephew of Stephanus
Van Cortlandt, Robert
Livingston the Elder, Jacobus
Van Cortlandt and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); first cousin of Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler; first cousin once removed of Volkert
Petrus Douw, Hendrick
Kiliaen Van Rensselaer, James
Livingston, Killian
Killian Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler and James
Alexander Hamilton; first cousin twice removed of Philip
P. Schuyler and Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer; first cousin thrice removed of John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775), Gilbert
Livingston, Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746) and Robert
Ray Hamilton; first cousin four times removed of David
Davidse Schuyler, Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler and John
Eliot Thayer Jr.; second cousin of Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), Leonard
Gansevoort, Leonard
Gansevoort Jr., Edward
Livingston (1764-1836), Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847) and Maturin
Livingston; second cousin once removed of Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792), Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Peter
Gansevoort, Gerrit
Smith and Elizabeth
Cady Stanton; second cousin twice removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Philip
Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775), Pierre
Van Cortlandt, William
Livingston, James
Jay, Philip
John Schuyler, Matthew
Clarkson (1733-1800), Stephen
John Schuyler, John
Jay, Frederick
Jay and John
Jacob Astor III; second cousin thrice removed of William
Waldorf Astor, Peter
Goelet Gerry and Ogden
Livingston Mills; second cousin four times removed of William
Astor Chanler, Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler, Helen
Roosevelt Robinson, Robert
Reginald Livingston and John
Hubner II; third cousin of Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer and Henry
Walter Livingston; third cousin once removed of Nicholas
Bayard, Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, Philip
Van Cortlandt, Henry
Brockholst Livingston, Matthew
Clarkson (1758-1825), Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., James
Parker, Peter
Augustus Jay, William
Jay, Edward
Livingston (1796-1840) and Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer; third cousin twice removed of Charles
Pinckney Brown and Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer; third cousin thrice removed of Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870) and Bronson
Murray Cutting; fourth cousin of Rensselaer
Westerlo, Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873), Hamilton
Fish, George
Washington Schuyler, John
Jay II, John
Cortlandt Parker and Philip
N. Schuyler; fourth cousin once removed of Gilbert
Livingston Thompson, William
Duer, Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard, James
Adams Ekin, Eugene
Schuyler, Richard
Wayne Parker, Nicholas
Fish, Hamilton
Fish Jr. and Charles
Wolcott Parker. |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; VanRensselaer-Gansevoort
family of Albany, New York (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also Wikipedia article |
|
|
Philip Schuyler Van Rensselaer (1767-1824) —
also known as Philip S. Van Rensselaer —
of Albany, Albany
County, N.Y.
Born in Albany, Albany
County, N.Y., April
15, 1767.
Mayor
of Albany, N.Y., 1799-1814, 1819-21.
Died September
25, 1824 (age 57 years, 163
days).
Burial location unknown.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Stephen Van Rensselaer (1742-1769) and Catharina (Livingston) Van
Rensselaer; half-brother of Rensselaer
Westerlo; brother of Stephen
Van Rensselaer (1764-1839); married, April
15, 1787, to Anne De Peyster Van Cortlandt (daughter of Pierre
Van Cortlandt); uncle of Philip
Schuyler and Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer; grandson of Philip
Livingston; grandnephew of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston and William
Livingston; granduncle of Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer; great-grandson of Dirck
Ten Broeck; great-grandnephew of John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775) and Gilbert
Livingston; second great-grandson of Stephanus
Van Cortlandt, Robert
Livingston the Elder and Pieter
Van Brugh; second great-grandnephew of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724), Jacobus
Van Cortlandt, Johannes
Cuyler and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); second great-granduncle of John
Eliot Thayer Jr.; third great-grandson of Dirck
Wesselse Ten Broeck; first cousin of Edward
Philip Livingston; first cousin once removed of Philip
P. Schuyler, Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, James
Livingston, Henry
Brockholst Livingston and Edward
Livingston (1796-1840); first cousin twice removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775), Philip
John Schuyler and Stephen
John Schuyler; first cousin thrice removed of Robert
Livingston the Younger, Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746), Cornelis
Cuyler, John
Cruger Jr. and Robert
Reginald Livingston; first cousin four times removed of David
Davidse Schuyler and Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler; second cousin of Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792), Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Henry
Walter Livingston, Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843), William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, William
Jay and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873); second cousin once removed of Volkert
Petrus Douw, Nicholas
Bayard, Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Hendrick
Kiliaen Van Rensselaer, Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), Philip
Van Cortlandt, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., Killian
Killian Van Rensselaer, Edward
Livingston (1764-1836), Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler, James
Parker, Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Gerrit
Smith, William
Duer, Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard, Elizabeth
Cady Stanton and John
Jay II; second cousin twice removed of James
Jay, Henry
Cruger, John
Jay, Frederick
Jay, Nicholas
Fish, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936), John
Kean, Hamilton
Fish Kean and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870); second cousin thrice removed of Herbert
Livingston Satterlee, Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933), Bronson
Murray Cutting, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991), Robert
Winthrop Kean and Brockholst
Livingston; second cousin four times removed of Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996) and Thomas
Howard Kean; second cousin five times removed of Hamilton
Fish (born 1951), Alexa
Fish Ward and Thomas
Howard Kean Jr.; third cousin of Leonard
Gansevoort, Leonard
Gansevoort Jr., Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, James
Alexander Hamilton, Peter
Gansevoort, Hamilton
Fish (1808-1893) and John
Cortlandt Parker; third cousin once removed of Gilbert
Livingston Thompson, James
Adams Ekin, John
Jacob Astor III, Richard
Wayne Parker and Charles
Wolcott Parker; third cousin twice removed of William
Waldorf Astor, Robert
Ray Hamilton, John
Sluyter Wirt, Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer and Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright; third cousin thrice removed of Guy
Vernor Henry, William
Astor Chanler, Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler, Montgomery
Schuyler Jr., Peter
Goelet Gerry, Helen
Roosevelt Robinson, Ogden
Livingston Mills, Marietta
Peabody Tree and Endicott
Peabody; fourth cousin of Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Maturin
Livingston, George
Washington Schuyler and Philip
N. Schuyler; fourth cousin once removed of Barent
Van Buren, Martin
Van Buren and Eugene
Schuyler. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also Wikipedia article |
|
|
Aylett Hawes (1768-1833) —
of Virginia.
Born in Culpeper
County, Va., April
21, 1768.
Democrat. Member of Virginia state legislature, 1802; U.S.
Representative from Virginia, 1811-17 (9th District 1811-15, 10th
District 1815-17).
Slaveowner.
Died August
31, 1833 (age 65 years, 132
days).
Interment a
private or family graveyard, Rappahannock County, Va.
|
|
Henry Walter Livingston (1768-1810) —
also known as Henry W. Livingston —
of Columbia
County, N.Y.
Born in Linlithgo, Columbia
County, N.Y., June 12,
1768.
Member of New York
state assembly from Columbia County, 1801-02, 1809-10; U.S.
Representative from New York 8th District, 1803-07.
Slaveowner.
Died near Linlithgo, Columbia
County, N.Y., December
22, 1810 (age 42 years, 193
days).
Burial location unknown.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Walter
Livingston and Cornelia (Schuyler) Livingston; married, November
27, 1796, to Mary Penn Allen; nephew of Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794) and Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792); uncle of Edward
Livingston (1796-1840); grandson of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790); grandnephew of Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Philip
Livingston, William
Livingston, Philip
John Schuyler, Philip
P. Schuyler and Stephen
John Schuyler; great-grandson of Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746); great-grandfather of Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870); great-grandnephew of John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775) and Gilbert
Livingston; great-granduncle of Bronson
Murray Cutting; second great-grandson of Stephanus
Van Cortlandt, Robert
Livingston the Elder, Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724), Pieter
Van Brugh and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); second great-grandfather of Brockholst
Livingston; second great-grandnephew of Jacobus
Van Cortlandt and Johannes
Cuyler; first cousin once removed of Philip
Peter Livingston, Henry
Brockholst Livingston, Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler and Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859); first cousin twice removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775) and Pierre
Van Cortlandt; first cousin thrice removed of Robert
Livingston the Younger, Cornelis
Cuyler, John
Cruger Jr. and Herbert
Livingston Satterlee; first cousin four times removed of David
Davidse Schuyler and Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler; second cousin of Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843), Rensselaer
Westerlo, Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, Philip
Schuyler, James
Alexander Hamilton, William
Jay and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873); second cousin once removed of Nicholas
Bayard, Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), James
Livingston, Philip
Van Cortlandt, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., Edward
Livingston (1764-1836), James
Parker, William
Duer, Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer, Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard and John
Jay II; second cousin twice removed of Volkert
Petrus Douw, James
Jay, Henry
Cruger, Hendrick
Kiliaen Van Rensselaer, John
Jay, Frederick
Jay, Killian
Killian Van Rensselaer, Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer, Nicholas
Fish, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936), Robert
Ray Hamilton, John
Kean and Hamilton
Fish Kean; second cousin thrice removed of Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933), John
Eliot Thayer Jr., Robert
Reginald Livingston, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991) and Robert
Winthrop Kean; second cousin four times removed of Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996) and Thomas
Howard Kean; second cousin five times removed of Hamilton
Fish (born 1951), Alexa
Fish Ward and Thomas
Howard Kean Jr.; third cousin of Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Maturin
Livingston, Hamilton
Fish (1808-1893) and John
Cortlandt Parker; third cousin once removed of Leonard
Gansevoort, Leonard
Gansevoort Jr., Gilbert
Livingston Thompson, Gerrit
Smith, Elizabeth
Cady Stanton, James
Adams Ekin, John
Jacob Astor III, Richard
Wayne Parker and Charles
Wolcott Parker; third cousin twice removed of William
Waldorf Astor, John
Sluyter Wirt, Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer and Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright; third cousin thrice removed of Guy
Vernor Henry, William
Astor Chanler, Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler, Montgomery
Schuyler Jr., Peter
Goelet Gerry, Helen
Roosevelt Robinson, Ogden
Livingston Mills, Marietta
Peabody Tree and Endicott
Peabody; fourth cousin of Peter
Gansevoort, George
Washington Schuyler and Philip
N. Schuyler; fourth cousin once removed of Eugene
Schuyler. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page |
|
|
Thomas Mann Randolph Jr. (1768-1828) —
of Virginia.
Born in Goochland
County, Va., October
1, 1768.
Democrat. Planter;
member of Virginia state legislature, 1800; U.S.
Representative from Virginia at-large, 1803-07; Governor of
Virginia, 1819-22.
Slaveowner.
Died near Charlottesville, Albemarle
County, Va., June 20,
1828 (age 59 years, 263
days).
Interment at Monticello
Graveyard, Near Charlottesville, Albemarle County, Va.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Thomas Mann Randolph and Anne (Cary) Randolph; married, February
23, 1790, to Martha
Jefferson (daughter of Thomas
Jefferson); father of Thomas
Jefferson Randolph, Virginia Jefferson Randolph (who married Nicholas
Philip Trist), Benjamin
Franklin Randolph, Meriwether
Lewis Randolph and George
Wythe Randolph; grandson of Archibald
Cary; grandfather of Thomas
Jefferson Coolidge; great-grandson of Richard
Randolph; great-grandfather of Virginia Minor Randolph (who
married George
Scott Shackelford) and John
Gardner Coolidge; first cousin once removed of John
Randolph of Roanoke; first cousin twice removed of Richard
Bland and Peyton
Randolph (1721-1775); second cousin of John
Marshall, James
Markham Marshall and Alexander
Keith Marshall; second cousin once removed of Theodorick
Bland, Edmund
Jenings Randolph, Beverley
Randolph, Thomas
Marshall and James
Keith Marshall; second cousin twice removed of John
Augustine Marshall; second cousin thrice removed of William
Marshall Bullitt and Alexander
Scott Bullitt; third cousin of Henry
Lee, Charles
Lee, Richard
Bland Lee, Edmund
Jennings Lee, Dabney
Carr, Peyton
Randolph (1779-1828), Henry
St. George Tucker, John
Robertson and Benjamin
William Sheridan Cabell; third cousin once removed of John
Wayles Eppes, Francis
Wayles Eppes, Dabney
Smith Carr, Nathaniel
Beverly Tucker, Edmund
Randolph, Carter
Henry Harrison, William
Lewis Cabell, George
Craighead Cabell and John
Breckinridge Castleman; third cousin twice removed of Fitzhugh
Lee, William
Henry Fitzhugh Lee, Joel
Walker Flood, Edmund
Randolph Cocke, Benjamin
Earl Cabell, Carter
Henry Harrison II, Edith
Wilson and Frederick
Madison Roberts; third cousin thrice removed of Henry
De La Warr Flood, Francis
Beverley Biddle, Joel
West Flood and Earle
Cabell; fourth cousin once removed of Thomas
Jones Hardeman, Bailey
Hardeman and Douglass
Townshend Bolling. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — National
Governors Association biography — Wikipedia article — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Philip Jeremiah Schuyler (1768-1835) —
also known as Philip J. Schuyler —
of Dutchess
County, N.Y.
Born in Albany, Albany
County, N.Y., January
21, 1768.
Republican. Member of New York
state assembly from Dutchess County, 1797-98; U.S.
Representative from New York 5th District, 1817-19.
Slaveowner.
Died, of consumption (tuberculosis),
in New York, New York
County, N.Y., February
21, 1835 (age 67 years, 31
days).
Original interment at New
York Marble Cemetery, Manhattan, N.Y.; subsequent interment at a
private or family graveyard, Dutchess County, N.Y.; reinterment
at Poughkeepsie
Rural Cemetery, Poughkeepsie, N.Y.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Philip
John Schuyler and Catherine (Van Rensselaer) Schuyler; brother of
Elizabeth Schuyler (who married Alexander
Hamilton); nephew of Stephen
John Schuyler, Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer and Robert
Van Rensselaer; uncle of Philip
Schuyler and James
Alexander Hamilton; grandson of Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746); great-grandson of Stephanus
Van Cortlandt, Robert
Livingston the Younger and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); great-grandnephew of Jacobus
Van Cortlandt; great-granduncle of Robert
Ray Hamilton; second great-grandson of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724); second great-grandnephew of Robert
Livingston the Elder; second great-granduncle of John
Eliot Thayer Jr.; first cousin of Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792) and Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer; first cousin once removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Volkert
Petrus Douw, Pierre
Van Cortlandt, Hendrick
Kiliaen Van Rensselaer, James
Livingston, Killian
Killian Van Rensselaer and Henry
Walter Livingston; first cousin twice removed of John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775), Gilbert
Livingston, Philip
P. Schuyler, Edward
Livingston (1796-1840) and Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer; first cousin thrice removed of David
Davidse Schuyler and Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler; first cousin four times removed of Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870) and Bronson
Murray Cutting; first cousin five times removed of Brockholst
Livingston; second cousin of Nicholas
Bayard, Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), Philip
Van Cortlandt, Leonard
Gansevoort, Leonard
Gansevoort Jr., Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., Edward
Livingston (1764-1836), Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Maturin
Livingston and James
Parker; second cousin once removed of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Philip
Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775), William
Livingston, James
Jay, John
Jay, Frederick
Jay, Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Peter
Gansevoort, Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Gerrit
Smith, Elizabeth
Cady Stanton and John
Cortlandt Parker; second cousin twice removed of Matthew
Clarkson (1733-1800), Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer, James
Adams Ekin, John
Jacob Astor III, Richard
Wayne Parker and Charles
Wolcott Parker; second cousin thrice removed of Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer, William
Waldorf Astor, John
Sluyter Wirt, Peter
Goelet Gerry and Ogden
Livingston Mills; second cousin four times removed of William
Astor Chanler, Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler, Helen
Roosevelt Robinson, Robert
Reginald Livingston, John
Hubner II, Marietta
Peabody Tree and Endicott
Peabody; third cousin of Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, Henry
Brockholst Livingston, Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843) and William
Jay; third cousin once removed of Matthew
Clarkson (1758-1825), Rensselaer
Westerlo, Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873), Hamilton
Fish, George
Washington Schuyler, John
Jay II and Philip
N. Schuyler; third cousin twice removed of Gilbert
Livingston Thompson, William
Duer, Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard, Charles
Pinckney Brown, Eugene
Schuyler, Nicholas
Fish and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936); third cousin thrice removed of John
Kean, Hamilton
Fish Kean, Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright, Karl
Cortlandt Schuyler, Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933) and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991). |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Schuyler
family of Albany, New York; VanRensselaer-Gansevoort
family of Albany, New York (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Wikipedia article |
|
|
John Woodworth (1768-1858) —
of Troy, Rensselaer
County, N.Y.; Albany, Albany
County, N.Y.
Born in Schodack, Rensselaer
County, N.Y., November
12, 1768.
Lawyer;
Rensselaer
County Surrogate, 1793-1804; member of New York
state assembly from Rensselaer County, 1802-03; member of New York
state senate Eastern District, 1803-07; New York
state attorney general, 1804-08; appointed 1804; Justice of
New York Supreme Court, 1819-28.
Died in Albany, Albany
County, N.Y., June 1,
1858 (age 89 years, 201
days).
Burial location unknown.
|
|
Nicholas Ware (1769-1824) —
of Georgia.
Born in Caroline
County, Va., 1769.
Member of Georgia
state house of representatives, 1808-11, 1814-15; mayor
of Augusta, Ga., 1819-21; U.S.
Senator from Georgia, 1821-24; died in office 1824.
Slaveowner.
Died in New York, New York
County, N.Y., September
7, 1824 (age about 55
years).
Interment at Grace
Church Cemetery, Jamaica, Queens, N.Y.
|
|
George Keith Taylor (1769-1815) —
of Virginia.
Born in Petersburg,
Va., March
16, 1769.
Member of Virginia
state house of delegates, 1795-96, 1798-99; Judge
of U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit, 1801.
Died November
9, 1815 (age 46 years, 238
days).
Interment somewhere
in Petersburg, Va.
|
|
Maturin Livingston (1769-1847) —
of Dutchess
County, N.Y.
Born in New York, New York
County, N.Y., April
10, 1769.
Delegate
to New York state constitutional convention, 1801; Dutchess
County Judge, 1823-28; insurance
business.
Died in New York, New York
County, N.Y., November
7, 1847 (age 78 years, 211
days).
Burial location unknown.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Robert James Livingston and Susanna (Smith) Livingston; brother of
Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847); married, May 28,
1798, to Margaret Lewis (daughter of Morgan
Lewis); great-grandson of Robert
Livingston the Younger; great-grandfather of Peter
Goelet Gerry and Ogden
Livingston Mills; second great-grandson of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724); second great-grandnephew of Robert
Livingston the Elder and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); first cousin once removed of Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, James
Livingston and Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859); first cousin twice removed of Philip
P. Schuyler; first cousin thrice removed of John
Livingston, Gilbert
Livingston and Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746); first cousin four times removed of David
Davidse Schuyler and Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler; second cousin of Robert
R. Livingston, Benjamin
Tallmadge, Edward
Livingston (1764-1836), Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer and Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler; second cousin once removed of Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792), Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Philip
Schuyler, James
Alexander Hamilton, Frederick
Augustus Tallmadge, Gerrit
Smith and Elizabeth
Cady Stanton; second cousin twice removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Robert
Livingston, Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Philip
Livingston, Pierre
Van Cortlandt, William
Livingston, Philip
John Schuyler, Matthew
Clarkson (1733-1800), Stephen
John Schuyler, John
Jacob Astor III and Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer; second cousin thrice removed of William
Waldorf Astor, Robert
Ray Hamilton and Charles
Dunsmore Millard; second cousin four times removed of William
Astor Chanler, Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler, Helen
Roosevelt Robinson, John
Eliot Thayer Jr. and Robert
Reginald Livingston; third cousin of Henry
Walter Livingston; third cousin once removed of Nicholas
Bayard, Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, Philip
Van Cortlandt, Henry
Brockholst Livingston, Matthew
Clarkson (1758-1825), Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., James
Parker and Edward
Livingston (1796-1840); third cousin thrice removed of Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870) and Bronson
Murray Cutting; fourth cousin of Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Peter
Augustus Jay, Rensselaer
Westerlo, Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, Peter
Gansevoort, William
Jay, Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873), Hamilton
Fish, George
Washington Schuyler, John
Cortlandt Parker and Philip
N. Schuyler; fourth cousin once removed of Gilbert
Livingston Thompson, William
Duer, Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer, Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard, John
Jay II, James
Adams Ekin, Eugene
Schuyler, Richard
Wayne Parker, Nicholas
Fish, Hamilton
Fish Jr. and Charles
Wolcott Parker. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|
|
Alexander Keith Marshall (1770-1825) —
of Kentucky.
Born in Fauquier
County, Va., January
11, 1770.
Lawyer;
member of Kentucky
state house of representatives, 1797-1801.
Died in Mason
County, Ky., February
7, 1825 (age 55 years, 27
days).
Burial location unknown.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Thomas Marshall (1730-1802) and Mary Randolph (Keith) Marshall;
brother of John
Marshall and James
Markham Marshall; uncle and first cousin once removed of Thomas
Alexander Marshall; uncle of Thomas
Marshall (1784-1835), Edward
Colston, James
Keith Marshall, Thomas
Francis Marshall, Alexander
Keith Marshall (1808-1884), Charles
Alexander Marshall and Edward
Colston Marshall; granduncle of John
Augustine Marshall; great-grandnephew of Richard
Randolph; great-granduncle of William
Marshall Bullitt and Alexander
Scott Bullitt; first cousin and brother-in-law of Humphrey
Marshall; first cousin twice removed of Richard
Bland and Peyton
Randolph (1721-1775); second cousin of Thomas
Mann Randolph Jr.; second cousin once removed of Theodorick
Bland, Thomas
Jefferson, Edmund
Jenings Randolph, Beverley
Randolph, John
Randolph of Roanoke, Benjamin
Franklin Randolph, Meriwether
Lewis Randolph and George
Wythe Randolph; second cousin twice removed of Thomas
Jefferson Coolidge; second cousin thrice removed of John
Gardner Coolidge; third cousin of Henry
Lee, Charles
Lee, Richard
Bland Lee, Edmund
Jennings Lee, Martha
Jefferson Randolph, Dabney
Carr, Peyton
Randolph (1779-1828) and Henry
St. George Tucker; third cousin once removed of Francis
Wayles Eppes, Dabney
Smith Carr, Edmund
Randolph, Nathaniel
Beverly Tucker, Carter
Henry Harrison and John
Breckinridge Castleman; third cousin twice removed of Fitzhugh
Lee, William
Henry Fitzhugh Lee, Edmund
Randolph Cocke, Carter
Henry Harrison II and Frederick
Madison Roberts; third cousin thrice removed of Edith
Wilson and Francis
Beverley Biddle; fourth cousin of John
Wayles Eppes. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|
|
Robert Monroe Harrison (1770-1858) —
of Virginia.
Born in Halifax
County, Va., April
16, 1770.
U.S. Consul in Kingston, 1831-58, died in office 1858.
Died in Kingston, Jamaica,
May
25, 1858 (age 88 years, 39
days).
Interment at St.
Andrew's Churchyard, Half Way Tree, Jamaica.
|
|
Thomas Morris (1771-1849) —
of Ontario
County, N.Y.
Born in Philadelphia, Philadelphia
County, Pa., February
26, 1771.
Member of New York
state assembly from Ontario County, 1793-96; member of New York
state senate Western District, 1796-1801; member of New York
council of appointment, 1797; U.S.
Representative from New York 10th District, 1801-03.
Slaveowner.
Died in New York, New York
County, N.Y., March
12, 1849 (age 78 years, 14
days).
Burial location unknown.
|
|
Edmund Jennings Lee (1772-1843) —
of Alexandria, D.C. (now Va.).
Born in Prince
William County, Va., May 20,
1772.
Lawyer;
mayor
of Alexandria, D.C., 1815-18.
Died in Alexandria,
Va., May 30,
1843 (age 71 years, 10
days).
Interment at Christ
Church Episcopal Cemetery, Alexandria, Va.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Henry Lee (1730-1787) and Lucy (Grymes) Lee; brother of Henry
Lee (1756-1818), Charles
Lee and Richard
Bland Lee; married to Sarah Caldwell Lee; grandnephew of Richard
Bland; granduncle of Fitzhugh
Lee and William
Henry Fitzhugh Lee; great-grandnephew of Richard
Randolph; third great-granduncle of Lee
Marvin; first cousin once removed of Richard
Henry Lee, Francis
Lightfoot Lee, Arthur
Lee and Theodorick
Bland (1742-1790); first cousin twice removed of Peyton
Randolph (1721-1775); second cousin of Thomas
Sim Lee, John
Randolph of Roanoke and Henry
St. George Tucker; second cousin once removed of Thomas
Jefferson, Edmund
Jenings Randolph, Beverley
Randolph, John
Lee and Nathaniel
Beverly Tucker; second cousin twice removed of Francis
Preston Blair Lee; second cousin thrice removed of John
Lee Carroll and Edward
Brooke Lee; second cousin four times removed of William
Welby Beverley, Blair
Lee III and Edward
Brooke Lee Jr.; second cousin five times removed of Outerbridge
Horsey; third cousin of John
Marshall, James
Markham Marshall, Thomas
Mann Randolph Jr., Alexander
Keith Marshall, Martha
Jefferson Randolph, Dabney
Carr, Theodorick
Bland (1776-1846), Peyton
Randolph (1779-1828) and Zachary
Taylor; third cousin once removed of Thomas
Marshall, James
Keith Marshall, Francis
Wayles Eppes, Dabney
Smith Carr, Benjamin
Franklin Randolph, Meriwether
Lewis Randolph, George
Wythe Randolph, Thomas
Leonidas Crittenden, Edmund
Randolph, Carter
Henry Harrison and John
Breckinridge Castleman; third cousin twice removed of Hancock
Lee Jackson, Thomas
Jefferson Coolidge, Edmund
Randolph Cocke, John
Augustine Marshall, Carter
Henry Harrison II and Frederick
Madison Roberts; third cousin thrice removed of Abraham
Lincoln, John
Gardner Coolidge, Elliot
Woolfolk Major, James
Sansome Lakin, Edgar
Bailey Woolfolk, Edith
Wilson, William
Marshall Bullitt, Alexander
Scott Bullitt and Francis
Beverley Biddle; fourth cousin of John
Wayles Eppes. |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Lee-Mason
family of Virginia; Lee
family of Silver Spring, Maryland (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also Wikipedia
article — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Philip DePeyster (1772-1846) —
of New York.
Born in New York, New York
County, N.Y., February
5, 1772.
Merchant;
U.S. Consul in Curaçao, 1806-15; Basse-Terre, 1815-21.
Died in 1846
(age about
74 years).
Interment at Green-Wood
Cemetery, Brooklyn, N.Y.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of William DePeyster and Elizabeth (Brasher) DePeyster; grandnephew
of Johannes
DePeyster; great-grandson of Johannes
de Peyster; great-grandnephew of Abraham
de Peyster; first cousin once removed of Matthew
Clarkson and Henry
Rutgers; second cousin of James
I. Roosevelt; second cousin once removed of Pierre
Van Cortlandt, Nicholas
Roosevelt Jr. and Robert
Barnwell Roosevelt; second cousin twice removed of Theodore
Roosevelt and Corinne
Roosevelt Robinson; second cousin thrice removed of Theodore
Douglas Robinson, Alice
Roosevelt Longworth, Eleanor
Roosevelt, Corinne
Alsop Cole, Theodore
Roosevelt Jr. and William
Sheffield Cowles; second cousin four times removed of James
Roosevelt, Elliott
Roosevelt, Corinne
Alsop Chubb, Franklin
Delano Roosevelt Jr. and John
deKoven Alsop; second cousin five times removed of Susan
Roosevelt Weld; third cousin of Philip
Peter Livingston, John
Stevens III, Philip
Van Cortlandt and Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr.; third cousin once removed of William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer and Charles
Ludlow Livingston; third cousin twice removed of William
Duer, Denning
Duer, George
Washington Roosevelt and Franklin
Delano Roosevelt; third cousin thrice removed of Nicholas
Fish, Hamilton
Fish Jr., John
Kean, Hamilton
Fish Kean and Helen
Roosevelt Robinson. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Martha Jefferson Randolph (1772-1836) —
also known as Patsy Randolph; Martha
Jefferson —
Born in Albemarle
County, Va., September
27, 1772.
First Lady of Virginia, 1819-22.
Female.
Died in Albemarle
County, Va., October
10, 1836 (age 64 years, 13
days).
Interment at Monticello
Graveyard, Near Charlottesville, Albemarle County, Va.
|  |
Relatives:
Daughter of Thomas
Jefferson and Martha (Wayles) Jefferson; married, February
23, 1790, to Thomas
Mann Randolph Jr.; mother of Thomas
Jefferson Randolph, Benjamin
Franklin Randolph, Meriwether
Lewis Randolph and George
Wythe Randolph; aunt of Francis
Wayles Eppes; grandmother of Thomas
Jefferson Coolidge; grandaunt of Frederick
Madison Roberts; great-grandmother of John
Gardner Coolidge; great-grandniece of Richard
Randolph; first cousin of Dabney
Carr and John
Wayles Eppes; first cousin once removed of Dabney
Smith Carr; first cousin twice removed of Richard
Bland and Peyton
Randolph (1721-1775); first cousin thrice removed of Edith
Wilson; second cousin once removed of Theodorick
Bland, Edmund
Jenings Randolph, Beverley
Randolph, John
Randolph of Roanoke, John
Jordan Crittenden, Thomas
Turpin Crittenden, Robert
Crittenden, Carter
Henry Harrison and John
Breckinridge Castleman; second cousin twice removed of Alexander
Parker Crittenden, Thomas
Leonidas Crittenden, Thomas
Theodore Crittenden, Archelaus
Marius Woodson and Carter
Henry Harrison II; second cousin thrice removed of Thomas
Theodore Crittenden Jr.; third cousin of John
Marshall, Henry
Lee, Charles
Lee, Richard
Bland Lee, James
Markham Marshall, Alexander
Keith Marshall, Edmund
Jennings Lee, Peyton
Randolph (1779-1828) and Henry
St. George Tucker; third cousin once removed of Thomas
Marshall, John
Robertson, Benjamin
William Sheridan Cabell, James
Keith Marshall, Edmund
Randolph and Nathaniel
Beverly Tucker; third cousin twice removed of William
Lewis Cabell, Fitzhugh
Lee, George
Craighead Cabell, William
Henry Fitzhugh Lee, Edmund
Randolph Cocke, John
Augustine Marshall and William
Henry Robertson; third cousin thrice removed of Joel
Walker Flood, Thomas
Lawton Davis, Connally
Findlay Trigg, Benjamin
Earl Cabell, William
Marshall Bullitt, Alexander
Scott Bullitt and Francis
Beverley Biddle; fourth cousin of Thomas
Jones Hardeman and Bailey
Hardeman. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also Wikipedia article — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Daniel Cady (1773-1859) —
of Montgomery
County, N.Y.
Born in Canaan, Columbia
County, N.Y., April
29, 1773.
Republican. Lawyer;
member of New York
state assembly from Montgomery County, 1808-11, 1812-13; U.S.
Representative from New York 14th District, 1815-17; Justice of
New York Supreme Court 4th District, 1847-55; Republican
Presidential Elector for New York, 1856.
Slaveowner.
Died in Johnstown, Fulton
County, N.Y., October
31, 1859 (age 86 years, 185
days).
Interment at Johnstown
Cemetery, Johnstown, N.Y.
|
|
John Wayles Eppes (1773-1823) —
of Charles City, Charles
City County, Va.
Born in Chesterfield
County, Va., April
19, 1773.
Democrat. Member of Virginia
state house of delegates, 1801-03; U.S.
Representative from Virginia, 1803-11, 1813-15 (at-large 1803-07,
16th District 1807-09, 22nd District 1809-11, 16th District 1813-15);
U.S.
Senator from Virginia, 1817-21.
Slaveowner.
Died in Buckingham
County, Va., September
13, 1823 (age 50 years, 147
days).
Interment a
private or family graveyard, Buckingham County, Va.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Francis Eppes and Elizabeth (Wayles) Eppes; married to Maria
Jefferson (daughter of Thomas
Jefferson); father of Francis
Wayles Eppes; first cousin of Martha
Jefferson Randolph; first cousin once removed of Beverley
Randolph, Benjamin
Franklin Randolph, Meriwether
Lewis Randolph and George
Wythe Randolph; first cousin twice removed of Thomas
Jefferson Coolidge; first cousin thrice removed of Richard
Randolph and John
Gardner Coolidge; second cousin once removed of Theodorick
Bland and John
Robertson; second cousin twice removed of Richard
Bland, Peyton
Randolph (1721-1775), William
Henry Fitzhugh Lee and Douglass
Townshend Bolling; second cousin thrice removed of Thomas
Lawton Davis, Connally
Findlay Trigg and Richard
Walker Bolling; second cousin four times removed of William
Welby Beverley; third cousin of John
Randolph of Roanoke and Henry
St. George Tucker; third cousin once removed of Edmund
Jenings Randolph, Thomas
Mann Randolph Jr., Benjamin
William Sheridan Cabell and Nathaniel
Beverly Tucker; third cousin twice removed of William
Lewis Cabell, George
Craighead Cabell and William
Henry Robertson; third cousin thrice removed of Joel
Walker Flood, Benjamin
Earl Cabell and Edith
Wilson; fourth cousin of John
Marshall, Henry
Lee, Charles
Lee, Richard
Bland Lee, James
Markham Marshall, Alexander
Keith Marshall, Edmund
Jennings Lee, Dabney
Carr, Peyton
Randolph (1779-1828), Thomas
Jones Hardeman and Bailey
Hardeman; fourth cousin once removed of Thomas
Marshall, James
Keith Marshall, Dabney
Smith Carr, Edmund
Randolph, Carter
Henry Harrison and John
Breckinridge Castleman. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Wikipedia article — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
 |
William Henry Harrison (1773-1841) —
also known as "Tippecanoe"; "Old
Tip"; "Farmer of North Bend";
"General Mum"; "Cincinnatus of the
West" —
of Vincennes, Knox
County, Ind.; Cincinnati, Hamilton
County, Ohio.
Born in Berkeley, Charles
City County, Va., February
9, 1773.
Whig. Secretary
of Northwest Territory, 1798-99; Delegate
to U.S. Congress from Northwest Territory, 1799-1800; Governor
of Indiana Territory, 1801-12; general in the U.S. Army during
the War of 1812; U.S.
Representative from Ohio 1st District, 1816-19; member of Ohio
state senate, 1819-21; Presidential Elector for Ohio, 1820
(voted for James
Monroe and Daniel
D. Tompkins); candidate for Governor of
Ohio, 1820; Presidential Elector for Ohio, 1824
(voted for Henry
Clay and Nathan
Sanford); U.S.
Senator from Ohio, 1825-28; U.S. Minister to Gran Colombia, 1828-29; President
of the United States, 1841; defeated, 1836; died in office 1841.
Episcopalian.
English
ancestry.
Slaveowner.
Died of pneumonia
or typhoid,
at the White
House, Washington,
D.C., April 4,
1841 (age 68 years, 54
days).
Interment at Harrison
Tomb, North Bend, Ohio.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Benjamin
Harrison (1726-1791) and Elizabeth (Bassett) Harrison; brother of
Carter
Bassett Harrison; married, November
22, 1795, to Anna
Tuthill Symmes (daughter of John
Cleves Symmes); father of John
Scott Harrison (1804-1878); grandfather of Benjamin
Harrison (1833-1901) and John
Scott Harrison (1844-1926); great-grandfather of Russell
Benjamin Harrison; second great-grandfather of William
Henry Harrison (1896-1990); first cousin of Beverley
Randolph and Burwell
Bassett; first cousin once removed of Robert
Carter Nicholas (1729-1780) and William
Fitzhugh; first cousin twice removed of Carter
Henry Harrison and John
Breckinridge Castleman; first cousin thrice removed of Carter
Henry Harrison II; second cousin of George
Nicholas, Wilson
Cary Nicholas and John
Nicholas; second cousin once removed of Peyton
Randolph and Robert
Carter Nicholas (1787-1857); second cousin twice removed of Thomas
Marshall, James
Keith Marshall, Peter
Myndert Dox, Edmund
Randolph and William
Henry Fitzhugh Lee; second cousin thrice removed of Edmund
Randolph Cocke, Connally
Findlay Trigg, Richard
Evelyn Byrd, Harry
Bartow Hawes and William
Welby Beverley; second cousin four times removed of Francis
Beverley Biddle and Harry
Flood Byrd; second cousin five times removed of Harry
Flood Byrd Jr.; fourth cousin once removed of Robert
Monroe Harrison. |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Breckinridge-Preston-Harrison-Richardson
family of Virginia; Washington
family of Virginia (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | Harrison counties in Ind., Iowa, Miss. and Ohio are
named for him. |
|  | The city
of Harrison,
New Jersey, is named for
him. |
|  | Other politicians named for him: William
H. Harrison Taylor
— William
H. H. Bingham
— William
H. H. Ross
— William
H. H. Comstock
— William
H. H. Bailey
— William
H. H. Lewis
— W.
H. H. Eba
— William
H. H. Wroe
— William
H. H. Dickinson
— William
H. H. Gere
— William
H. H. Clayton
— William
H. H. Allen
— William
H. H. Beadle
— William
H. H. Keeney
— William
H. H. Varney
— William
H. H. Cowles
— William
H. H. Stowell
— William
H. H. Miller
— William
H. H. Cook
— William
H. H. Hill
— William
H. H. Flick
— William
H. H. Sieg
— William
H. H. Slack
— William
H. H. Webster
— William
H. H. Fine
— William
H. Heard
— William
H. H. Hart
— William
H. H. Llewellyn
— William
H. H. Lea
— William
H. H. Cash
— William
H. H. Bowen
— William
H. H. Heath
— William
H. H. Gardner
|
|  | Campaign slogan (1840): "Tippecanoe and
Tyler Too." |
|  | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Wikipedia article — U.S. State Dept career summary — NNDB
dossier — Find-A-Grave
memorial — OurCampaigns
candidate detail |
|  | Books about William Henry Harrison:
Freeman Cleaves, Old
Tippecanoe: William Henry Harrison and His Time —
Norma Lois Peterson, Presidencies
of William Henry Harrison and John Tyler — David
Lillard, William
Henry Harrison (for young readers) |
|  | Image source: Portrait & Biographical
Album of Washtenaw County (1891) |
|
 |
John Randolph of Roanoke (1773-1833) —
of Charlotte
County, Va.
Born in Cawsons, Prince
George County, Va., June 2,
1773.
U.S.
Representative from Virginia, 1799-1813, 1815-17, 1819-25,
1827-29, 1833 (at-large 1799-1807, 15th District 1807-13, 16th
District 1815-17, 1819-21, 5th District 1821-25, 1827-29, 1833); died
in office 1833; U.S.
Senator from Virginia, 1825-27; U.S. Minister to Russia, 1830.
Slaveowner.
Died in Philadelphia, Philadelphia
County, Pa., May 24,
1833 (age 59 years, 356
days).
Original interment at a
private or family graveyard, Charlotte County, Va.; reinterment
at Hollywood
Cemetery, Richmond, Va.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of John Randolph and Frances (Bland) Randolph; half-brother of Henry
St. George Tucker; nephew of Theodorick
Bland (1742-1790); uncle of Nathaniel
Beverly Tucker; grandson of Richard
Randolph; grandnephew of Richard
Bland; first cousin once removed of Peyton
Randolph (1721-1775) and Thomas
Mann Randolph Jr.; first cousin twice removed of Benjamin
Franklin Randolph, Meriwether
Lewis Randolph and George
Wythe Randolph; first cousin thrice removed of Thomas
Jefferson Coolidge; first cousin four times removed of John
Gardner Coolidge; second cousin of Thomas
Jefferson, Edmund
Jenings Randolph, Beverley
Randolph, Henry
Lee, Charles
Lee, Richard
Bland Lee and Edmund
Jennings Lee; second cousin once removed of John
Marshall, James
Markham Marshall, Alexander
Keith Marshall, Martha
Jefferson Randolph, Dabney
Carr, Peyton
Randolph (1779-1828), John
Robertson and Benjamin
William Sheridan Cabell; second cousin twice removed of Thomas
Marshall, James
Keith Marshall, Francis
Wayles Eppes, Dabney
Smith Carr, Edmund
Randolph, Carter
Henry Harrison, William
Lewis Cabell, Fitzhugh
Lee, George
Craighead Cabell, William
Henry Fitzhugh Lee and John
Breckinridge Castleman; second cousin thrice removed of Joel
Walker Flood, Edmund
Randolph Cocke, John
Augustine Marshall, Benjamin
Earl Cabell, Carter
Henry Harrison II, Edith
Wilson and Frederick
Madison Roberts; second cousin four times removed of Henry
De La Warr Flood, William
Marshall Bullitt, Alexander
Scott Bullitt, Francis
Beverley Biddle, William
Welby Beverley, Joel
West Flood and Earle
Cabell; second cousin five times removed of Harry
Flood Byrd and Lee
Marvin; third cousin of John
Wayles Eppes and Theodorick
Bland (1776-1846); third cousin once removed of David
Meriwether (1755-1822), James
Meriwether (1755-1817) and Meriwether
Lewis; third cousin twice removed of Douglass
Townshend Bolling; third cousin thrice removed of Thomas
Lawton Davis, Connally
Findlay Trigg, William
Henry Robertson and Richard
Walker Bolling; fourth cousin of Thomas
Jones Hardeman, James
Meriwether (1788-1852), Bailey
Hardeman, David
Meriwether (1800-1893) and James
Archibald Meriwether; fourth cousin once removed of George
Rockingham Gilmer and Reuben
Handy Meriwether. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | The World War II Liberty
ship SS John Randolph (built 1941 at Baltimore,
Maryland; mined and sank, in the Denmark
Strait, 1942) was named for
him. |
|  | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — U.S. State Dept career summary |
|  | Image source: The South in the Building
of the Nation (1909) |
|
|
Dabney Carr (1773-1837) —
Born in Richmond,
Va., April
27, 1773.
Judge
of U.S. Court of Appeals, 1824-37.
Died in Richmond,
Va., January
8, 1837 (age 63 years, 256
days).
Interment at Shockoe
Hill Cemetery, Richmond, Va.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Dabney Carr (1743-1773) and Martha (Jefferson) Carr; married 1800 to
Elizabeth Carr; nephew of Thomas
Jefferson; uncle of Dabney
Smith Carr; great-grandnephew of Richard
Randolph; first cousin of Martha
Jefferson Randolph; first cousin once removed of Francis
Wayles Eppes, Benjamin
Franklin Randolph, Meriwether
Lewis Randolph and George
Wythe Randolph; first cousin twice removed of Richard
Bland, Peyton
Randolph (1721-1775), Thomas
Jefferson Coolidge and Frederick
Madison Roberts; first cousin thrice removed of John
Gardner Coolidge and Edith
Wilson; second cousin once removed of Theodorick
Bland, Edmund
Jenings Randolph, Beverley
Randolph, John
Randolph of Roanoke, John
Jordan Crittenden, Thomas
Turpin Crittenden, Robert
Crittenden, Carter
Henry Harrison and John
Breckinridge Castleman; second cousin twice removed of Alexander
Parker Crittenden, Thomas
Leonidas Crittenden, Thomas
Theodore Crittenden, Archelaus
Marius Woodson and Carter
Henry Harrison II; second cousin thrice removed of Thomas
Theodore Crittenden Jr.; third cousin of John
Marshall, Henry
Lee, Charles
Lee, Richard
Bland Lee, James
Markham Marshall, Thomas
Mann Randolph Jr., Alexander
Keith Marshall, Edmund
Jennings Lee, Peyton
Randolph (1779-1828) and Henry
St. George Tucker; third cousin once removed of Thomas
Marshall, James
Keith Marshall, Edmund
Randolph and Nathaniel
Beverly Tucker; third cousin twice removed of Fitzhugh
Lee, William
Henry Fitzhugh Lee, Edmund
Randolph Cocke and John
Augustine Marshall; third cousin thrice removed of William
Marshall Bullitt, Alexander
Scott Bullitt and Francis
Beverley Biddle; fourth cousin of John
Wayles Eppes. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Solomon Van Vechten Van Rensselaer (1774-1852) —
also known as Solomon Van Rensselaer —
of Albany, Albany
County, N.Y.
Born in New York, 1774.
Whig. U.S.
Representative from New York 9th District, 1819-22; postmaster at
Albany,
N.Y., 1822-39, 1841-43; delegate to Whig National Convention from
New York, 1839.
Slaveowner.
Died in 1852
(age about
78 years).
Original interment at North
Dutch Church Cemetery, Albany, N.Y.; reinterment at Albany
Rural Cemetery, Menands, N.Y.
|
|
Joseph Hamilton Daviess (1774-1811) —
also known as Joe Daviess —
of Danville, Boyle
County, Ky.; Lexington, Fayette
County, Ky.
Born in Bedford
County, Va., March 4,
1774.
Lawyer;
U.S.
Attorney for Kentucky, 1800-06; major in the U.S. Army during the
War of 1812.
Welsh
ancestry. Member, Freemasons.
Around 1801, he served as a second to John
Rowan in his duel
with James Chambers; after Chambers was killed, he fled
to avoid
prosecution as accomplice to murder,
and became a fugitive,
but when Rowan was arrested, he returned to act as Rowan's legal
counsel.
Shot
and killed
in the Battle of Tippecanoe, in what is now Tippecanoe
County, Ind., November
7, 1811 (age 37 years, 248
days).
Interment at Tippecanoe
Battlefield Park, Battle Ground, Ind.
|
|
George Tucker (1775-1861) —
of Lynchburg,
Va.; Philadelphia, Philadelphia
County, Pa.
Born in St. Georges, Bermuda,
August
20, 1775.
Democrat. Lawyer;
member of Virginia
state house of delegates, 1815; U.S.
Representative from Virginia, 1819-25 (15th District 1819-21, 6th
District 1821-25); university
professor.
Slaveowner.
Died in Sherwood, Albemarle
County, Va., April
10, 1861 (age 85 years, 233
days).
Interment at University
of Virginia Cemetery, Charlottesville, Va.
|
|
Anna Harrison (1775-1864) —
also known as Anna Tuthill Symmes —
Born in Morristown, Morris
County, N.J., July 25,
1775.
First
Lady of the United States, 1841.
Female.
Died in North Bend, Hamilton
County, Ohio, February
25, 1864 (age 88 years, 215
days).
Interment at Harrison
Tomb, North Bend, Ohio.
|
|
James Parker (1776-1868) —
of Perth Amboy, Middlesex
County, N.J.
Born in Bethlehem, Hunterdon
County, N.J., March 3,
1776.
Democrat. Member of New
Jersey state house of assembly from Middlesex County, 1806-10,
1812-13, 1815-16, 1818, 1827; mayor
of Perth Amboy, N.J., 1815, 1850; Presidential Elector for New
Jersey, 1824;
U.S.
Collector of Customs at Perth Amboy, N.J., New Jersey, 1829-33;
U.S.
Representative from New Jersey at-large, 1833-37; delegate
to New Jersey state constitutional convention, 1844.
Episcopalian.
Slaveowner.
Died in Perth Amboy, Middlesex
County, N.J., April 1,
1868 (age 92 years, 29
days).
Interment at St.
Peter's Churchyard, Perth Amboy, N.J.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of James Parker (1725-1797) and Gertrude (Skinner) Parker; married,
January
5, 1803, to Penelope Butler; married, September
20, 1827, to Katherine Morris Ogden; father of John
Cortlandt Parker; grandfather of Richard
Wayne Parker and Charles
Wolcott Parker; great-grandson of Stephanus
Van Cortlandt; great-grandnephew of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724), Jacobus
Van Cortlandt and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); second great-grandfather of Marietta
Peabody Tree and Endicott
Peabody; first cousin once removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Pierre
Van Cortlandt, Philip
John Schuyler and Stephen
John Schuyler; first cousin twice removed of John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775), Gilbert
Livingston and Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746); first cousin thrice removed of David
Davidse Schuyler and Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler; second cousin of Nicholas
Bayard, Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792), Philip
Van Cortlandt, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr. and Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler; second cousin once removed of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Philip
Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775), William
Livingston, James
Jay, Philip
P. Schuyler, John
Jay, Frederick
Jay, Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Henry
Walter Livingston, Philip
Schuyler and James
Alexander Hamilton; second cousin twice removed of Edward
Livingston (1796-1840), Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer and James
Adams Ekin; second cousin thrice removed of Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Ray Hamilton and John
Sluyter Wirt; second cousin four times removed of Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870), John
Eliot Thayer Jr. and Bronson
Murray Cutting; second cousin five times removed of Brockholst
Livingston; third cousin of Volkert
Petrus Douw, Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, Hendrick
Kiliaen Van Rensselaer, Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), James
Livingston, Henry
Brockholst Livingston, Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Killian
Killian Van Rensselaer, Edward
Livingston (1764-1836), Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843) and William
Jay; third cousin once removed of Leonard
Gansevoort, Leonard
Gansevoort Jr., Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Maturin
Livingston, Rensselaer
Westerlo, Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873), Hamilton
Fish, George
Washington Schuyler, John
Jay II and Philip
N. Schuyler; third cousin twice removed of Peter
Gansevoort, Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Gilbert
Livingston Thompson, Gerrit
Smith, William
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard, Denning
Duer, Elizabeth
Cady Stanton, John
Jacob Astor III, Eugene
Schuyler, Nicholas
Fish and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936); third cousin thrice removed of William
Waldorf Astor, John
Kean, Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Hamilton
Fish Kean, Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright, Karl
Cortlandt Schuyler, Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933) and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991); fourth cousin once removed of Asa H.
Otis. |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Parker-Schuyler
family of Perth Amboy, New Jersey (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Rensselaer Westerlo (1776-1851) —
of New York.
Born in Albany, Albany
County, N.Y., April
29, 1776.
Lawyer;
served in the U.S. Army during the War of 1812; U.S.
Representative from New York 9th District, 1817-19.
Slaveowner.
Died in Albany, Albany
County, N.Y., April
18, 1851 (age 74 years, 354
days).
Interment at Albany
Rural Cemetery, Menands, N.Y.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Eilardus Westerlo and Catharina (Livingston) Westerlo;
half-brother of Stephen
Van Rensselaer and Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer; brother of Catherine Westerlo (who
married John
Woodworth); married, May 5,
1805, to Jane Lansing; uncle of Philip
Schuyler and Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer; grandson of Philip
Livingston; grandnephew of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston and William
Livingston; granduncle of Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer; great-grandson of Dirck
Ten Broeck; great-grandnephew of John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775) and Gilbert
Livingston; second great-grandson of Robert
Livingston the Elder and Pieter
Van Brugh; second great-grandnephew of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724), Johannes
Cuyler and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); second great-granduncle of John
Eliot Thayer Jr.; third great-grandson of Dirck
Wesselse Ten Broeck; first cousin of Edward
Philip Livingston; first cousin once removed of Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, James
Livingston, Henry
Brockholst Livingston and Edward
Livingston (1796-1840); first cousin twice removed of Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston and Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775); first cousin thrice removed of Robert
Livingston the Younger, Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746), Cornelis
Cuyler, John
Cruger Jr. and Robert
Reginald Livingston; first cousin four times removed of David
Davidse Schuyler and Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler; second cousin of Henry
Walter Livingston, Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843), William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, William
Jay and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873); second cousin once removed of Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), Philip
Van Cortlandt, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., Edward
Livingston (1764-1836), Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Gerrit
Smith, William
Duer, Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard, Elizabeth
Cady Stanton and John
Jay II; second cousin twice removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Pierre
Van Cortlandt, Philip
John Schuyler, Philip
P. Schuyler, Stephen
John Schuyler, Henry
Cruger, Nicholas
Fish, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936), John
Kean, Hamilton
Fish Kean and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870); second cousin thrice removed of Herbert
Livingston Satterlee, Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933), Bronson
Murray Cutting, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991), Robert
Winthrop Kean and Brockholst
Livingston; second cousin four times removed of Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996) and Thomas
Howard Kean; second cousin five times removed of Hamilton
Fish (born 1951), Alexa
Fish Ward and Thomas
Howard Kean Jr.; third cousin of Peter
Gansevoort and Hamilton
Fish (1808-1893); third cousin once removed of Nicholas
Bayard, Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792), Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler, James
Parker, Gilbert
Livingston Thompson and John
Jacob Astor III; third cousin twice removed of William
Waldorf Astor and Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright; third cousin thrice removed of Guy
Vernor Henry, William
Astor Chanler, Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler, Montgomery
Schuyler Jr., Peter
Goelet Gerry, Helen
Roosevelt Robinson and Ogden
Livingston Mills; fourth cousin of Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Maturin
Livingston, James
Alexander Hamilton, George
Washington Schuyler, John
Cortlandt Parker and Philip
N. Schuyler; fourth cousin once removed of Barent
Van Buren, Martin
Van Buren, James
Adams Ekin, Eugene
Schuyler, Richard
Wayne Parker and Charles
Wolcott Parker. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Wikipedia
article — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Theodorick Bland (1776-1846) —
of Baltimore,
Md.
Born in Dinwiddie
County, Va., December
6, 1776.
Lawyer;
member of Maryland
state house of delegates, 1809; district judge in Maryland,
1812-17; U.S.
District Judge for Maryland, 1819-24; resigned 1824.
Died, from heart
disease, in Annapolis, Anne
Arundel County, Md., November
16, 1846 (age 69 years, 345
days).
Interment at St.
Anne's Cemetery, Annapolis, Md.
|
|
Peter Augustus Jay (1776-1843) —
also known as Peter A. Jay —
of New York, New York
County, N.Y.
Born in Elizabethtown, Essex
County, N.Y., January
24, 1776.
Lawyer;
member of New York
state assembly from New York County, 1815-16; delegate
to New York state constitutional convention, 1821; president, New
York Hospital,
1827-33.
Died in New York, February
20, 1843 (age 67 years, 27
days).
Burial location unknown.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of John
Jay and Sarah (Livingston) Jay; brother of William
Jay; married, July 29,
1807, to Mary Rutherfurd Clarkson; nephew of James
Jay, Frederick
Jay and Henry
Brockholst Livingston; uncle of John
Jay II; grandson of William
Livingston; grandnephew of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston and Philip
Livingston; great-grandson of Jacobus
Van Cortlandt; great-grandfather of Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933); great-grandnephew of Stephanus
Van Cortlandt, John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775) and Gilbert
Livingston; second great-grandson of Robert
Livingston the Elder, Anthony
Brockholls, Pieter
Van Brugh and Phillip
French; second great-grandnephew of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724), Johannes
Cuyler and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); first cousin once removed of Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston and Henry
Brockholst Ledyard; first cousin twice removed of Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775) and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870); first cousin thrice removed of Robert
Livingston the Younger, Cornelis
Cuyler, Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746), John
Cruger Jr. and Brockholst
Livingston; first cousin four times removed of David
Davidse Schuyler and Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler; second cousin of Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Henry
Walter Livingston, Rensselaer
Westerlo, Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873); second cousin once removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Pierre
Van Cortlandt, Philip
John Schuyler, Stephen
John Schuyler, Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), Philip
Van Cortlandt, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., Edward
Livingston (1764-1836), Philip
Schuyler, Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Edward
Livingston (1796-1840), William
Duer, Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer and Denning
Duer; second cousin twice removed of Henry
Cruger, Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer, Nicholas
Fish, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936), John
Kean and Hamilton
Fish Kean; second cousin thrice removed of Herbert
Livingston Satterlee, Bronson
Murray Cutting, Robert
Reginald Livingston, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991) and Robert
Winthrop Kean; second cousin four times removed of John
Eliot Thayer Jr., Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996) and Thomas
Howard Kean; second cousin five times removed of Hamilton
Fish (born 1951), Alexa
Fish Ward and Thomas
Howard Kean Jr.; third cousin of Volkert
Petrus Douw, Nicholas
Bayard, Philip
P. Schuyler, Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Hendrick
Kiliaen Van Rensselaer, Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792), Killian
Killian Van Rensselaer, Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler, James
Parker and Hamilton
Fish (1808-1893); third cousin once removed of James
Livingston, Leonard
Gansevoort, Leonard
Gansevoort Jr., Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, James
Alexander Hamilton, Gilbert
Livingston Thompson, John
Cortlandt Parker and John
Jacob Astor III; third cousin twice removed of Peter
Gansevoort, James
Adams Ekin, Richard
Wayne Parker, William
Waldorf Astor, Charles
Wolcott Parker and Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright; third cousin thrice removed of Guy
Vernor Henry, Robert
Ray Hamilton, John
Sluyter Wirt, Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, William
Astor Chanler, Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler, Montgomery
Schuyler Jr., Peter
Goelet Gerry, Helen
Roosevelt Robinson and Ogden
Livingston Mills; fourth cousin of Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Maturin
Livingston, George
Washington Schuyler and Philip
N. Schuyler; fourth cousin once removed of Gerrit
Smith, Elizabeth
Cady Stanton and Eugene
Schuyler. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also Wikipedia
article |
|
|
William Brockenbrough (1778-1838) —
of Virginia.
Born in Essex
County, Va., July 10,
1778.
Lawyer;
member of Virginia
state house of delegates, 1802-03, 1807-09.
Died in Richmond,
Va., December
10, 1838 (age 60 years, 153
days).
Burial location unknown.
|
|
Peyton Randolph (1779-1828) —
of Virginia.
Born in Gloucester
County, Va., January
1, 1779.
Governor
of Virginia, 1811-12.
Died in Amelia
County, Va., December
26, 1828 (age 49 years, 360
days).
Interment a
private or family graveyard, Amelia County, Va.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Elizabeth Carter (Nicholas) Randolph and Edmund
Jenings Randolph; married 1806 to Maria
Ward; father of Edmund
Randolph; nephew of George
Nicholas, Wilson
Cary Nicholas and John
Nicholas; grandson of Robert
Carter Nicholas (1729-1780); grandnephew of Peyton
Randolph (1721-1775); granduncle of Edmund
Randolph Cocke; great-grandnephew of Richard
Randolph; great-granduncle of Francis
Beverley Biddle; first cousin of Robert
Carter Nicholas (1787-1857); first cousin once removed of Peter
Myndert Dox; first cousin twice removed of Richard
Bland, Benjamin
Harrison (1726-1791), William
Fitzhugh and Harry
Bartow Hawes; second cousin once removed of Theodorick
Bland, Thomas
Jefferson, Beverley
Randolph, Carter
Bassett Harrison, William
Henry Harrison (1773-1841), John
Randolph of Roanoke, Thomas
Marshall and James
Keith Marshall; third cousin of John
Marshall, Henry
Lee, Charles
Lee, Richard
Bland Lee, James
Markham Marshall, Thomas
Mann Randolph Jr., Alexander
Keith Marshall, Edmund
Jennings Lee, Martha
Jefferson Randolph, Dabney
Carr, Henry
St. George Tucker and John
Scott Harrison (1804-1878); third cousin once removed of Burwell
Bassett, Francis
Wayles Eppes, Dabney
Smith Carr, Benjamin
Franklin Randolph, Meriwether
Lewis Randolph, George
Wythe Randolph, Nathaniel
Beverly Tucker, Carter
Henry Harrison, Benjamin
Harrison (1833-1901), William
Henry Fitzhugh Lee, John
Breckinridge Castleman and John
Scott Harrison (1844-1926); third cousin twice removed of Thomas
Jefferson Coolidge, Fitzhugh
Lee, Connally
Findlay Trigg, Russell
Benjamin Harrison, John
Augustine Marshall, Richard
Evelyn Byrd, Carter
Henry Harrison II, Frederick
Madison Roberts and William
Welby Beverley; third cousin thrice removed of John
Gardner Coolidge, Edith
Wilson, William
Marshall Bullitt, Alexander
Scott Bullitt, Harry
Flood Byrd and William
Henry Harrison (1896-1990); fourth cousin of John
Wayles Eppes; fourth cousin once removed of Coleby
Chew, Montgomery
Blair and Francis
Preston Blair Jr.. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also National
Governors Association biography — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Edward Philip Livingston (1779-1843) —
also known as Edward P. Livingston —
of Columbia
County, N.Y.
Born in Kingston, Jamaica,
November
24, 1779.
Member of New York
state senate, 1808-12, 1823-24, 1838-39 (Middle District 1808-12,
3rd District 1823-24, 1838-39); resigned 1839; Lieutenant
Governor of New York, 1831-32.
Died in Clermont, Columbia
County, N.Y., November
3, 1843 (age 63 years, 344
days).
Burial location unknown.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Philip Philip Livingston and Sarah (Johnson) Livingston; married
to Elizabeth Stevens Livingston (daughter of Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813); niece of Edward
Livingston (1764-1836); granddaughter of Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775)); uncle of Edward
Livingston (1796-1840); grandson of Philip
Livingston; grandnephew of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston and William
Livingston; great-grandson of Dirck
Ten Broeck; great-grandfather of Robert
Reginald Livingston; great-grandnephew of John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775) and Gilbert
Livingston; second great-grandson of Robert
Livingston the Elder and Pieter
Van Brugh; second great-grandnephew of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724), Johannes
Cuyler and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); third great-grandson of Dirck
Wesselse Ten Broeck; first cousin of Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer and Rensselaer
Westerlo; first cousin once removed of Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, James
Livingston, Henry
Brockholst Livingston, Philip
Schuyler and Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer; first cousin twice removed of Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775) and Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer; first cousin thrice removed of Robert
Livingston the Younger, Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746), Cornelis
Cuyler and John
Cruger Jr.; first cousin four times removed of David
Davidse Schuyler, Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler and John
Eliot Thayer Jr.; second cousin of Henry
Walter Livingston, Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843), William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, William
Jay and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873); second cousin once removed of Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), Philip
Van Cortlandt, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., Edward
Livingston (1764-1836), Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Gerrit
Smith, William
Duer, Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard, Elizabeth
Cady Stanton and John
Jay II; second cousin twice removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Pierre
Van Cortlandt, Philip
John Schuyler, Philip
P. Schuyler, Stephen
John Schuyler, Henry
Cruger, Nicholas
Fish, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936), John
Kean, Hamilton
Fish Kean and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870); second cousin thrice removed of Herbert
Livingston Satterlee, Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933), Bronson
Murray Cutting, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991), Robert
Winthrop Kean and Brockholst
Livingston; second cousin four times removed of Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996) and Thomas
Howard Kean; second cousin five times removed of Hamilton
Fish (born 1951), Alexa
Fish Ward and Thomas
Howard Kean Jr.; third cousin of Peter
Gansevoort and Hamilton
Fish (1808-1893); third cousin once removed of Nicholas
Bayard, Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792), Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler, James
Parker, Gilbert
Livingston Thompson and John
Jacob Astor III; third cousin twice removed of William
Waldorf Astor and Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright; third cousin thrice removed of Guy
Vernor Henry, William
Astor Chanler, Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler, Montgomery
Schuyler Jr., Peter
Goelet Gerry, Helen
Roosevelt Robinson and Ogden
Livingston Mills; fourth cousin of Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Maturin
Livingston, James
Alexander Hamilton, George
Washington Schuyler, John
Cortlandt Parker and Philip
N. Schuyler; fourth cousin once removed of Barent
Van Buren, Martin
Van Buren, James
Adams Ekin, Eugene
Schuyler, Richard
Wayne Parker and Charles
Wolcott Parker. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|
|
Henry St. George Tucker (1780-1848) —
of Virginia.
Born in Chesterfield
County, Va., December
29, 1780.
Lawyer;
served in the U.S. Army during the War of 1812; U.S.
Representative from Virginia 3rd District, 1815-19; member of Virginia
state senate, 1819-23; law
professor; chancellor, 4th District, 1824-31; Judge, Virginia
Court of Appeals, 1831-41.
Slaveowner.
Died in Winchester,
Va., August
28, 1848 (age 67 years, 243
days).
Interment at Mt.
Hebron Cemetery, Winchester, Va.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Frances (Bland) Tucker and St.
George Tucker; half-brother of John
Randolph of Roanoke; married, September
23, 1806, to Ann Evelina Hunter; father of Nathaniel
Beverly Tucker and John
Randolph Tucker; nephew of Theodorick
Bland (1742-1790) and Thomas
Tudor Tucker; grandfather of Henry
St. George Tucker (1853-1932); grandnephew of Richard
Bland; great-grandnephew of Richard
Randolph; first cousin of George
Tucker; first cousin twice removed of Peyton
Randolph (1721-1775); second cousin of Henry
Lee, Charles
Lee, Richard
Bland Lee and Edmund
Jennings Lee; second cousin once removed of Thomas
Jefferson, Edmund
Jenings Randolph and Beverley
Randolph; second cousin twice removed of Fitzhugh
Lee and William
Henry Fitzhugh Lee; second cousin four times removed of William
Welby Beverley; second cousin five times removed of Lee
Marvin; third cousin of John
Marshall, James
Markham Marshall, Thomas
Mann Randolph Jr., Alexander
Keith Marshall, Martha
Jefferson Randolph, Dabney
Carr, John
Wayles Eppes, Theodorick
Bland (1776-1846) and Peyton
Randolph (1779-1828); third cousin once removed of David
Meriwether (1755-1822), James
Meriwether (1755-1817), Meriwether
Lewis, Thomas
Marshall, John
Robertson, Benjamin
William Sheridan Cabell, James
Keith Marshall, Francis
Wayles Eppes, Dabney
Smith Carr, Benjamin
Franklin Randolph, Meriwether
Lewis Randolph, George
Wythe Randolph, Edmund
Randolph, Carter
Henry Harrison and John
Breckinridge Castleman; third cousin twice removed of William
Lewis Cabell, Thomas
Jefferson Coolidge, George
Craighead Cabell, Edmund
Randolph Cocke, John
Augustine Marshall, Carter
Henry Harrison II, Frederick
Madison Roberts and Douglass
Townshend Bolling; third cousin thrice removed of Joel
Walker Flood, Thomas
Lawton Davis, Connally
Findlay Trigg, Benjamin
Earl Cabell, John
Gardner Coolidge, Edith
Wilson, William
Marshall Bullitt, Alexander
Scott Bullitt, Francis
Beverley Biddle and Richard
Walker Bolling; fourth cousin of James
Meriwether (1788-1852), David
Meriwether (1800-1893) and James
Archibald Meriwether; fourth cousin once removed of George
Rockingham Gilmer and Reuben
Handy Meriwether. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | Tucker County,
W.Va. is named for him. |
|  | The World War II Liberty
ship SS Henry St.G. Tucker (built 1942 at Baltimore,
Maryland; scrapped 1966) was named for
him. |
|  | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Auguste Davezac (1780-1851) —
also known as Auguste Genevieve Valentin
D'Avezac=de=Castera —
of New Orleans, Orleans
Parish, La.; New York, New York
County, N.Y.
Born near Les Cayes, Haiti,
1780.
Lawyer;
major in the U.S. Army during the War of 1812; U.S. Charge d'Affaires
to Netherlands, 1831-39, 1845-50; member of New York
state assembly from New York County, 1842, 1844.
Died in New York, New York
County, N.Y., February
15, 1851 (age about 70
years).
Interment at Calvary
Cemetery, Woodside, Queens, N.Y.
|
|
William Alexander Duer (1780-1858) —
also known as William A. Duer —
of Dutchess
County, N.Y.; Albany
County, N.Y.
Born in New York, New York
County, N.Y., September
8, 1780.
Lawyer;
member of New York
state assembly, 1813-19 (Dutchess County 1813-17, Albany County
1817-19); Justice of
New York Supreme Court, 1822-29; president,
Columbia College (now Columbia University), 1829-42.
Died in Staten Island, Richmond
County, N.Y., May 30,
1858 (age 77 years, 264
days).
Interment at First
Presbyterian Church Cemetery, Morristown, N.J.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of William
Duer (1747-1799) and Catherine (Alexander) Duer; brother of John
Duer; married to Hannah Maria Denning (daughter of William
Denning); father of Denning
Duer; uncle of William
Duer (1805-1879); grandnephew of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Philip
Livingston and William
Livingston; great-grandson of James
Alexander; great-grandnephew of John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775) and Gilbert
Livingston; second great-grandson of Robert
Livingston the Elder and Pieter
Van Brugh; second great-grandnephew of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724), Abraham
de Peyster, Johannes
Cuyler, Johannes
de Peyster and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); first cousin once removed of Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, John
Stevens III and Henry
Brockholst Livingston; first cousin twice removed of Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston and Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775); first cousin thrice removed of Robert
Livingston the Younger, Johannes
DePeyster, Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746), Cornelis
Cuyler and John
Cruger Jr.; first cousin four times removed of David
Davidse Schuyler and Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler; second cousin of Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Henry
Walter Livingston, Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843), Rensselaer
Westerlo, Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Jay and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873); second cousin once removed of Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), Philip
Van Cortlandt, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., Edward
Livingston (1764-1836), Philip
Schuyler, Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Edward
Livingston (1796-1840), Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard and John
Jay II; second cousin twice removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Pierre
Van Cortlandt, Philip
John Schuyler, Matthew
Clarkson, Philip
P. Schuyler, Stephen
John Schuyler, Henry
Cruger, Henry
Rutgers, Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer, Nicholas
Fish, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936), John
Kean, Hamilton
Fish Kean and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870); second cousin thrice removed of Herbert
Livingston Satterlee, Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933), Robert
Reginald Livingston, Bronson
Murray Cutting, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991), Robert
Winthrop Kean and Brockholst
Livingston; second cousin four times removed of John
Eliot Thayer Jr., Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996) and Thomas
Howard Kean; second cousin five times removed of Hamilton
Fish (born 1951), Alexa
Fish Ward and Thomas
Howard Kean Jr.; third cousin of Hamilton
Fish (1808-1893); third cousin once removed of Nicholas
Bayard, Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792), James
Livingston, Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler, Philip
DePeyster, James
Parker, Gilbert
Livingston Thompson and John
Jacob Astor III; third cousin twice removed of William
Waldorf Astor and Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright; third cousin thrice removed of Guy
Vernor Henry, William
Astor Chanler, Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler, Montgomery
Schuyler Jr., Peter
Goelet Gerry, Helen
Roosevelt Robinson and Ogden
Livingston Mills; fourth cousin of Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Maturin
Livingston, James
Alexander Hamilton, George
Washington Schuyler, John
Cortlandt Parker and Philip
N. Schuyler; fourth cousin once removed of Gerrit
Smith, Elizabeth
Cady Stanton, James
Adams Ekin, Eugene
Schuyler, Richard
Wayne Parker and Charles
Wolcott Parker. |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Livingston-Duer
family of New York City, New York (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also Wikipedia
article — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Benjamin Watkins Leigh (1781-1849) —
also known as Benjamin W. Leigh —
of Richmond,
Va.
Born in Chesterfield
County, Va., June 18,
1781.
Whig. Member of Virginia state legislature, 1811; delegate
to Virginia state constitutional convention, 1829; U.S.
Senator from Virginia, 1834-36; delegate to Whig National
Convention from Virginia, 1839 (member, Committee on Permanent
Organization; member, Balloting Committee; speaker).
Slaveowner.
Died February
2, 1849 (age 67 years, 229
days).
Interment at Shockoe
Hill Cemetery, Richmond, Va.
|
 |
Lewis Cass (1782-1866) —
of Detroit, Wayne
County, Mich.
Born in Exeter, Rockingham
County, N.H., October
9, 1782.
Democrat. Member of Ohio
state house of representatives, 1806; general in the U.S. Army
during the War of 1812; Governor
of Michigan Territory, 1813-31; U.S.
Secretary of War, 1831-36; U.S. Minister to France, 1836-42; member of University
of Michigan board of regents, 1843-44; appointed 1843; candidate
for Democratic nomination for President, 1844,
1852;
U.S.
Senator from Michigan, 1845-48, 1849-57; resigned 1848; candidate
for President
of the United States, 1848; U.S.
Secretary of State, 1857-60.
Member, Freemasons.
Died in Detroit, Wayne
County, Mich., June 17,
1866 (age 83 years, 251
days).
Interment at Elmwood
Cemetery, Detroit, Mich.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Jonathan Cass and Mary 'Molly' (Gilman) Cass; brother of Deborah
Webster Cass (who married Wyllys
Silliman); married to Elizabeth Selden Spencer (granddaughter of
Joseph
Spencer); father of Matilda Frances Cass (who married Henry
Brockholst Ledyard); second great-grandfather of Thomas
Cass Ballenger. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | Cass counties in Ill., Ind., Iowa, Mich., Minn., Mo., Neb. and Tex. are
named for him. |
|  | The town
and village
of Cassville,
Wisconsin, is named for
him. — The village
of Cass
City, Michigan, is named for
him. — The village
of Cassopolis,
Michigan, is named for
him. — The city
of Cassville,
Missouri, is named for
him. — Cass Lake,
and the adjoining city
of Cass
Lake, Minnesota, are named for
him. — Cass Lake, in Oakland
County, Michigan, is named for
him. — The Cass River,
in Tuscola
and Saginaw
counties, Michigan, is named for
him. — The Lewis Cass Building
(opened 1921 as the State Office Building; damaged in a fire in 1951;
rebuilt and named for Lewis Cass; changed to Elliott-Larsen Building
in 2020), in Lansing,
Michigan, was named for
him. — Cass Avenue,
Cass Park,
and Cass Technical High
School, in Detroit,
Michigan, are named for
him. |
|  | Other politicians named for him: Lewis
Cass Wilmarth
— Lewis
C. Carpenter
— Lewis
C. Vandergrift
— Lewis
C. Tidball
— Lewis
Cass Wick
— Lewis
Cass Tidball II
— Lewis
C. Gabbert
|
|  | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Wikipedia article — U.S. State Dept career summary — NNDB
dossier — Find-A-Grave
memorial — OurCampaigns
candidate detail |
|  | Books about Lewis Cass: Willard Carl
Klunder, Lewis
Cass and the Politics of Moderation — Frank Bury
Woodford, Lewis
Cass, the Last Jeffersonian |
|  | Image source: Library of
Congress |
|
|
John Duer (1782-1858) —
of New York.
Born in Albany, Albany
County, N.Y., October
7, 1782.
U.S.
Attorney for the Southern District of New York, 1828-29.
Died in Staten Island, Richmond
County, N.Y., August
8, 1858 (age 75 years, 305
days).
Interment at Trinity
Churchyard, Manhattan, N.Y.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of William
Duer (1747-1799) and Catherine (Alexander) Duer; brother of William
Alexander Duer; father of William
Duer (1805-1879); uncle of Denning
Duer; grandnephew of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Philip
Livingston and William
Livingston; great-grandson of James
Alexander; great-grandnephew of John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775) and Gilbert
Livingston; second great-grandson of Robert
Livingston the Elder and Pieter
Van Brugh; second great-grandnephew of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724), Abraham
de Peyster, Johannes
Cuyler, Johannes
de Peyster and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); first cousin once removed of Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, John
Stevens III and Henry
Brockholst Livingston; first cousin twice removed of Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston and Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775); first cousin thrice removed of Robert
Livingston the Younger, Johannes
DePeyster, Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746), Cornelis
Cuyler and John
Cruger Jr.; first cousin four times removed of David
Davidse Schuyler and Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler; second cousin of Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Henry
Walter Livingston, Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843), Rensselaer
Westerlo, Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Jay and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873); second cousin once removed of Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), Philip
Van Cortlandt, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., Edward
Livingston (1764-1836), Philip
Schuyler, Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Edward
Livingston (1796-1840), Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard and John
Jay II; second cousin twice removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Pierre
Van Cortlandt, Philip
John Schuyler, Matthew
Clarkson, Philip
P. Schuyler, Stephen
John Schuyler, Henry
Cruger, Henry
Rutgers, Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer, Nicholas
Fish, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936), John
Kean, Hamilton
Fish Kean and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870); second cousin thrice removed of Herbert
Livingston Satterlee, Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933), Robert
Reginald Livingston, Bronson
Murray Cutting, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991), Robert
Winthrop Kean and Brockholst
Livingston; second cousin four times removed of John
Eliot Thayer Jr., Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996) and Thomas
Howard Kean; second cousin five times removed of Hamilton
Fish (born 1951), Alexa
Fish Ward and Thomas
Howard Kean Jr.; third cousin of Hamilton
Fish (1808-1893); third cousin once removed of Nicholas
Bayard, Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792), James
Livingston, Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler, Philip
DePeyster, James
Parker, Gilbert
Livingston Thompson and John
Jacob Astor III; third cousin twice removed of William
Waldorf Astor and Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright; third cousin thrice removed of Guy
Vernor Henry, William
Astor Chanler, Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler, Montgomery
Schuyler Jr., Peter
Goelet Gerry, Helen
Roosevelt Robinson and Ogden
Livingston Mills; fourth cousin of Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Maturin
Livingston, James
Alexander Hamilton, George
Washington Schuyler, John
Cortlandt Parker and Philip
N. Schuyler; fourth cousin once removed of Gerrit
Smith, Elizabeth
Cady Stanton, James
Adams Ekin, Eugene
Schuyler, Richard
Wayne Parker and Charles
Wolcott Parker. |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Livingston-Duer
family of New York City, New York (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also Wikipedia
article — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Thomas Marshall (1784-1835) —
Born in Richmond,
Va., July 21,
1784.
Delegate
to Virginia state constitutional convention, 1829.
During a storm,
he took shelter in the burned ruins of the Baltimore County
Courthouse, and was struck in the head by a brick dislodged by lightning;
he suffered a fractured skull, and died a week later, in Baltimore,
Md., June 29,
1835 (age 50 years, 343
days).
Burial location unknown.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of John
Marshall and Mary Willis (Ambler) Marshall; brother of James
Keith Marshall; married, October
19, 1809, to Margaret W. Lewis; nephew of James
Markham Marshall and Alexander
Keith Marshall; grandson of Jacquelin
Ambler; great-grandnephew of Robert
Carter Nicholas (1729-1780); second great-grandnephew of Richard
Randolph; first cousin once removed of John
Augustine Marshall; first cousin twice removed of George
Nicholas, Wilson
Cary Nicholas, John
Nicholas, William
Marshall Bullitt and Alexander
Scott Bullitt; first cousin thrice removed of Richard
Bland, Peyton
Randolph (1721-1775), Benjamin
Harrison (1726-1791) and William
Fitzhugh; second cousin of William
Marshall Ambler; second cousin once removed of Thomas
Mann Randolph Jr., Peyton
Randolph (1779-1828) and Robert
Carter Nicholas (1787-1857); second cousin twice removed of Theodorick
Bland, Thomas
Jefferson, Edmund
Jenings Randolph, Beverley
Randolph, Carter
Bassett Harrison, William
Henry Harrison and John
Randolph of Roanoke; third cousin of Benjamin
Franklin Randolph, Meriwether
Lewis Randolph, Peter
Myndert Dox, George
Wythe Randolph and Edmund
Randolph; third cousin once removed of Henry
Lee, Charles
Lee, Richard
Bland Lee, Burwell
Bassett, Edmund
Jennings Lee, Martha
Jefferson Randolph, Dabney
Carr, Henry
St. George Tucker, John
Scott Harrison (1804-1878), Thomas
Jefferson Coolidge, Edmund
Randolph Cocke and Harry
Bartow Hawes; third cousin twice removed of John
Gardner Coolidge and Francis
Beverley Biddle; fourth cousin of Francis
Wayles Eppes, Dabney
Smith Carr, Nathaniel
Beverly Tucker, Carter
Henry Harrison, Benjamin
Harrison (1833-1901), William
Henry Fitzhugh Lee, John
Breckinridge Castleman and John
Scott Harrison (1844-1926); fourth cousin once removed of John
Wayles Eppes, Fitzhugh
Lee, Connally
Findlay Trigg, Russell
Benjamin Harrison, Carter
Henry Harrison II, Richard
Evelyn Byrd, Frederick
Madison Roberts and William
Welby Beverley. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|
|
William Appleton (1786-1862) —
of Boston, Suffolk
County, Mass.
Born in Brookfield, Worcester
County, Mass., November
16, 1786.
U.S.
Representative from Massachusetts, 1851-55, 1861 (1st District
1851-53, 5th District 1853-55, 1861); defeated, 1854, 1856.
Died in Brookline, Norfolk
County, Mass., February
15, 1862 (age 75 years, 91
days).
Interment at Mt.
Auburn Cemetery, Cambridge, Mass.
|
|
Edward Colston (1786-1852) —
of Virginia.
Born near Winchester, Frederick
County, Va., December
25, 1786.
Lawyer;
served in the U.S. Army during the War of 1812; member of Virginia
state house of delegates, 1812-14, 1816-17, 1823-28, 1833-35; U.S.
Representative from Virginia 2nd District, 1817-19.
Slaveowner.
Died in Berkeley
County, Va (now W.Va.), April
23, 1852 (age 65 years, 120
days).
Interment a
private or family graveyard, Berkeley County, W.Va.
|
|
Robert Livingston Tillotson (1786-1878) —
also known as Robert L. Tillotson —
of New York.
Born in 1786.
Secretary
of state of New York, 1816-17; U.S.
Attorney for the Southern District of New York, 1819-28.
Died in Rhinebeck, Dutchess
County, N.Y., July 22,
1878 (age about 92
years).
Burial location unknown.
|
|
Alexander Hamilton Jr. (1786-1875) —
of New York, New York
County, N.Y.
Born May 16,
1786.
Lawyer;
served in the U.S. Army during the War of 1812; member of New York
state assembly from New York County, 1818-19.
Died August
2, 1875 (age 89 years, 78
days).
Burial location unknown.
|
|
Robert Carter Nicholas (1787-1857) —
also known as Robert C. Nicholas —
of Donaldsonville, Ascension
Parish, La.
Born in Hanover
County, Va., January
10, 1787.
Democrat. Colonel in the U.S. Army during the War of 1812; sugar cane
planter;
U.S.
Senator from Louisiana, 1836-41; secretary
of state of Louisiana, 1845; Louisiana Superintendent of
Education, 1849-53.
Slaveowner.
Died in Terrebonne
Parish, La., December
24, 1857 (age 70 years, 348
days).
Entombed at St.
Louis Cemetery No. 2, New Orleans, La.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of George
Nicholas and Mary (Smith) Nicholas; brother of Henrietta Morrison
Nicholas (who married Richard
Hawes); married to Susan Adelaide Vinson; nephew of Wilson
Cary Nicholas and John
Nicholas; grandson of Robert
Carter Nicholas (1729-1780); granduncle of Harry
Bartow Hawes; first cousin of Peyton
Randolph; first cousin once removed of Peter
Myndert Dox and Edmund
Randolph; first cousin twice removed of Benjamin
Harrison (1726-1791), William
Fitzhugh and Edmund
Randolph Cocke; first cousin thrice removed of Francis
Beverley Biddle; second cousin once removed of Carter
Bassett Harrison, William
Henry Harrison (1773-1841), Thomas
Marshall and James
Keith Marshall; third cousin of John
Scott Harrison (1804-1878); third cousin once removed of Burwell
Bassett, Carter
Henry Harrison, Benjamin
Harrison (1833-1901), William
Henry Fitzhugh Lee, John
Breckinridge Castleman and John
Scott Harrison (1844-1926); third cousin twice removed of Connally
Findlay Trigg, Russell
Benjamin Harrison, Carter
Henry Harrison II, Richard
Evelyn Byrd and William
Welby Beverley; third cousin thrice removed of Harry
Flood Byrd and William
Henry Harrison (1896-1990); fourth cousin once removed of Montgomery
Blair and Francis
Preston Blair Jr.. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Wikipedia article |
|
 |
John Alsop King (1788-1867) —
also known as John A. King —
of Queens
County, N.Y.
Born in New York, New York
County, N.Y., January
3, 1788.
Lawyer;
served in the U.S. Army during the War of 1812; member of New York
state assembly from Queens County, 1818-21, 1832, 1838, 1840;
member of New York
state senate 1st District, 1823; U.S.
Representative from New York 1st District, 1849-51; Governor of
New York, 1857-59.
Died in Jamaica, Queens, Queens
County, N.Y., July 7,
1867 (age 79 years, 185
days).
Interment at Grace
Church Cemetery, Jamaica, Queens, N.Y.
|
|
James Alexander Hamilton (1788-1878) —
also known as James A. Hamilton —
of Dobbs Ferry, Westchester
County, N.Y.
Born in New York, New York
County, N.Y., April
14, 1788.
Whig. Lawyer;
served in the U.S. Army during the War of 1812; U.S.
Secretary of State, 1829; U.S.
Attorney for the Southern District of New York, 1829-34; delegate
to Whig National Convention from New York, 1839 (member, Balloting
Committee).
Died in Irvington, Westchester
County, N.Y., September
24, 1878 (age 90 years, 163
days).
Interment at Sleepy
Hollow Cemetery, Sleepy Hollow, N.Y.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Elizabeth (Schuyler) Hamilton and Alexander
Hamilton; married, October
17, 1810, to Mary Morris; nephew of Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler; grandson of Philip
John Schuyler; grandnephew of Stephen
John Schuyler, Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer and Robert
Van Rensselaer; granduncle of Robert
Ray Hamilton; great-grandson of Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746); second great-grandson of Stephanus
Van Cortlandt, Robert
Livingston the Younger and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); second great-grandnephew of Jacobus
Van Cortlandt; third great-grandson of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724); third great-grandnephew of Robert
Livingston the Elder; first cousin of Philip
Schuyler; first cousin once removed of Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792) and Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer; first cousin twice removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Volkert
Petrus Douw, Pierre
Van Cortlandt, Hendrick
Kiliaen Van Rensselaer, James
Livingston and Killian
Killian Van Rensselaer; first cousin thrice removed of John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775), Gilbert
Livingston, Philip
P. Schuyler and John
Eliot Thayer Jr.; first cousin four times removed of David
Davidse Schuyler and Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler; second cousin of Henry
Walter Livingston; second cousin once removed of Nicholas
Bayard, Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), Philip
Van Cortlandt, Leonard
Gansevoort, Leonard
Gansevoort Jr., Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., Edward
Livingston (1764-1836), Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Maturin
Livingston, James
Parker, Edward
Livingston (1796-1840) and Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer; second cousin twice removed of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Philip
Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775), William
Livingston, James
Jay, John
Jay, Frederick
Jay and Peter
Samuel Schuyler; second cousin thrice removed of Matthew
Clarkson (1733-1800), Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870) and Bronson
Murray Cutting; second cousin four times removed of Brockholst
Livingston; third cousin of Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Peter
Gansevoort, Gerrit
Smith, Elizabeth
Cady Stanton and John
Cortlandt Parker; third cousin once removed of Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, Henry
Brockholst Livingston, Peter
Augustus Jay, William
Jay, Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer, James
Adams Ekin, John
Jacob Astor III, Richard
Wayne Parker and Charles
Wolcott Parker; third cousin twice removed of Matthew
Clarkson (1758-1825), Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer, William
Waldorf Astor, John
Sluyter Wirt, Peter
Goelet Gerry and Ogden
Livingston Mills; third cousin thrice removed of William
Astor Chanler, Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler, Helen
Roosevelt Robinson, Robert
Reginald Livingston, John
Hubner II, Marietta
Peabody Tree and Endicott
Peabody; fourth cousin of Rensselaer
Westerlo, Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873), Hamilton
Fish, George
Washington Schuyler, John
Jay II and Philip
N. Schuyler; fourth cousin once removed of Gilbert
Livingston Thompson, William
Duer, Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard, Charles
Pinckney Brown, Eugene
Schuyler, Nicholas
Fish and Hamilton
Fish Jr.. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Jacquelin Burwell Harvie (1788-1856) —
also known as J. B. Harvie —
of Richmond,
Va.
Born in Richmond,
Va., October
9, 1788.
Whig. Delegate to Whig National Convention from Virginia, 1839;
member of Virginia
state senate, 1830.
Died in Richmond,
Va., February
9, 1856 (age 67 years, 123
days).
Burial location unknown.
|
|
Philip Schuyler (1788-1865) —
of Saratoga
County, N.Y.
Born in Albany
County, N.Y., October
26, 1788.
Member of New York
state assembly from Saratoga County, 1825; U.S. Consul in Liverpool, 1840-42.
Died in Pelham, Westchester
County, N.Y., February
12, 1865 (age 76 years, 109
days).
Burial location unknown.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of John Braadstreet Schuyler and Elizabeth (Van Rensselaer) Schuyler;
nephew of Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler and Rensselaer
Westerlo; grandson of Philip
John Schuyler; grandnephew of Stephen
John Schuyler, Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer and Robert
Van Rensselaer; great-grandson of Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746) and Philip
Livingston; great-grandnephew of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston and William
Livingston; second great-grandson of Stephanus
Van Cortlandt, Robert
Livingston the Younger, Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747) and Dirck
Ten Broeck; second great-grandnephew of Jacobus
Van Cortlandt, John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775) and Gilbert
Livingston; third great-grandson of Robert
Livingston the Elder, Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724) and Pieter
Van Brugh; third great-grandnephew of Johannes
Cuyler; fourth great-grandson of Dirck
Wesselse Ten Broeck; first cousin of James
Alexander Hamilton and Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer; first cousin once removed of Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792), Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Edward
Philip Livingston and Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer; first cousin twice removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Volkert
Petrus Douw, Pierre
Van Cortlandt, Philip
P. Schuyler, Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, Hendrick
Kiliaen Van Rensselaer, James
Livingston, Henry
Brockholst Livingston, Killian
Killian Van Rensselaer and Robert
Ray Hamilton; first cousin thrice removed of Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775) and John
Eliot Thayer Jr.; first cousin four times removed of David
Davidse Schuyler, Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler, Cornelis
Cuyler and John
Cruger Jr.; second cousin of Henry
Walter Livingston and Edward
Livingston (1796-1840); second cousin once removed of Nicholas
Bayard, Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), Philip
Van Cortlandt, Leonard
Gansevoort, Leonard
Gansevoort Jr., Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., Edward
Livingston (1764-1836), Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Maturin
Livingston, James
Parker, Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843), William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, William
Jay, Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873) and Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer; second cousin twice removed of James
Jay, John
Jay, Frederick
Jay and Robert
Reginald Livingston; second cousin thrice removed of Matthew
Clarkson (1733-1800), Henry
Cruger and Bronson
Murray Cutting; second cousin four times removed of Brockholst
Livingston; third cousin of Peter
Gansevoort, Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Gerrit
Smith, William
Duer, Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard, Elizabeth
Cady Stanton, John
Jay II and John
Cortlandt Parker; third cousin once removed of Hamilton
Fish, James
Adams Ekin, John
Jacob Astor III, Richard
Wayne Parker, Nicholas
Fish, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936), John
Kean, Hamilton
Fish Kean, Charles
Wolcott Parker and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870); third cousin twice removed of Matthew
Clarkson (1758-1825), William
Waldorf Astor, John
Sluyter Wirt, Herbert
Livingston Satterlee, Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933), Peter
Goelet Gerry, Ogden
Livingston Mills, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991) and Robert
Winthrop Kean; third cousin thrice removed of William
Astor Chanler, Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler, Helen
Roosevelt Robinson, John
Hubner II, Marietta
Peabody Tree, Endicott
Peabody, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996) and Thomas
Howard Kean; fourth cousin of Gilbert
Livingston Thompson, George
Washington Schuyler and Philip
N. Schuyler; fourth cousin once removed of Charles
Pinckney Brown, Eugene
Schuyler and Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright. |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Schuyler
family of Albany, New York (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|
|
Peter Robert Livingston (1789-1859) —
also known as Peter R. Livingston —
of Livingston, Columbia
County, N.Y.
Born in West Copake, Columbia
County, N.Y., August
8, 1789.
Whig. Member of New York
state assembly from Columbia County, 1839.
Died in Livingston, Columbia
County, N.Y., December
9, 1859 (age 70 years, 123
days).
Interment at Clermont Cemetery, Clermont, N.Y.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Eliza (Platner) Livingston and Walter Tryon Livingston; married,
March
16, 1811, to Jane Van Slyck Thorn; grandson of Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794); grandnephew of Walter
Livingston; great-grandson of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790); great-grandnephew of Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Philip
Livingston and William
Livingston; second great-grandson of Robert
Livingston the Younger; second great-grandnephew of John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775) and Gilbert
Livingston; third great-grandson of Robert
Livingston the Elder, Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724) and Pieter
Van Brugh; third great-grandnephew of Johannes
Cuyler and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); first cousin once removed of Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Henry
Walter Livingston and Maturin
Livingston; first cousin twice removed of Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Peter Livingston, James
Livingston and Henry
Brockholst Livingston; first cousin thrice removed of Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775) and Philip
P. Schuyler; first cousin four times removed of Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746), Cornelis
Cuyler and John
Cruger Jr.; first cousin five times removed of David
Davidse Schuyler and Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler; second cousin of Edward
Livingston (1796-1840); second cousin once removed of Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), Edward
Livingston (1764-1836), Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler, Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843), Rensselaer
Westerlo, Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, William
Jay and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873); second cousin twice removed of Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792), Philip
Van Cortlandt, Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., Herbert
Livingston Satterlee, Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870), Peter
Goelet Gerry, Ogden
Livingston Mills and Bronson
Murray Cutting; second cousin thrice removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Pierre
Van Cortlandt, Philip
John Schuyler, Matthew
Clarkson (1733-1800), Stephen
John Schuyler, Henry
Cruger and Brockholst
Livingston; third cousin of Philip
Schuyler, James
Alexander Hamilton, Gerrit
Smith, William
Duer, Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer, Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard, Elizabeth
Cady Stanton and John
Jay II; third cousin once removed of Hamilton
Fish, John
Jacob Astor III, Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer, Nicholas
Fish, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936), John
Kean, Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer and Hamilton
Fish Kean; third cousin twice removed of Nicholas
Bayard, Matthew
Clarkson (1758-1825), James
Parker, William
Waldorf Astor, Robert
Ray Hamilton, Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933), Robert
Reginald Livingston, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991) and Robert
Winthrop Kean; third cousin thrice removed of William
Astor Chanler, Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler, Helen
Roosevelt Robinson, John
Eliot Thayer Jr., Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996) and Thomas
Howard Kean; fourth cousin of Gilbert
Livingston Thompson; fourth cousin once removed of Peter
Gansevoort, George
Washington Schuyler, John
Cortlandt Parker, Philip
N. Schuyler and Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
William Jay (1789-1858) —
of Westchester
County, N.Y.
Born in New York, New York
County, N.Y., June 16,
1789.
Lawyer;
Westchester
County Judge, 1820-42.
Anti-slavery activist.
Died in Bedford, Westchester
County, N.Y., October
14, 1858 (age 69 years, 120
days).
Interment at Jay
Family Cemetery, Rye, N.Y.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of John
Jay and Sarah (Livingston) Jay; brother of Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843); married to Hannah Augusta McVicker;
father of John
Jay II; nephew of James
Jay, Frederick
Jay and Henry
Brockholst Livingston; grandson of William
Livingston; grandnephew of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston and Philip
Livingston; great-grandson of Jacobus
Van Cortlandt; great-grandnephew of Stephanus
Van Cortlandt, John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775) and Gilbert
Livingston; great-granduncle of Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933); second great-grandson of Robert
Livingston the Elder, Anthony
Brockholls, Pieter
Van Brugh and Phillip
French; second great-grandnephew of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724), Johannes
Cuyler and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); first cousin once removed of Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, Matthew
Clarkson and Henry
Brockholst Ledyard; first cousin twice removed of Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775) and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870); first cousin thrice removed of Robert
Livingston the Younger, Cornelis
Cuyler, Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746), John
Cruger Jr. and Brockholst
Livingston; first cousin four times removed of David
Davidse Schuyler and Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler; second cousin of Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Henry
Walter Livingston, Rensselaer
Westerlo, Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873); second cousin once removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Pierre
Van Cortlandt, Philip
John Schuyler, Stephen
John Schuyler, Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), Philip
Van Cortlandt, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., Edward
Livingston (1764-1836), Philip
Schuyler, Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Edward
Livingston (1796-1840), William
Duer, Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer and Denning
Duer; second cousin twice removed of Henry
Cruger, Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer, Nicholas
Fish, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936), John
Kean and Hamilton
Fish Kean; second cousin thrice removed of Herbert
Livingston Satterlee, Bronson
Murray Cutting, Robert
Reginald Livingston, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991) and Robert
Winthrop Kean; second cousin four times removed of John
Eliot Thayer Jr., Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996) and Thomas
Howard Kean; second cousin five times removed of Hamilton
Fish (born 1951), Alexa
Fish Ward and Thomas
Howard Kean Jr.; third cousin of Volkert
Petrus Douw, Nicholas
Bayard, Philip
P. Schuyler, Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Hendrick
Kiliaen Van Rensselaer, Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792), Killian
Killian Van Rensselaer, Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler, James
Parker and Hamilton
Fish (1808-1893); third cousin once removed of James
Livingston, Leonard
Gansevoort, Leonard
Gansevoort Jr., Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, James
Alexander Hamilton, Gilbert
Livingston Thompson, John
Cortlandt Parker and John
Jacob Astor III; third cousin twice removed of Peter
Gansevoort, James
Adams Ekin, Richard
Wayne Parker, William
Waldorf Astor, Charles
Wolcott Parker and Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright; third cousin thrice removed of Guy
Vernor Henry, Robert
Ray Hamilton, John
Sluyter Wirt, Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, William
Astor Chanler, Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler, Montgomery
Schuyler Jr., Peter
Goelet Gerry, Helen
Roosevelt Robinson and Ogden
Livingston Mills; fourth cousin of Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Maturin
Livingston, George
Washington Schuyler and Philip
N. Schuyler; fourth cousin once removed of Gerrit
Smith, Elizabeth
Cady Stanton and Eugene
Schuyler. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also Wikipedia
article — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
John Watts Cady (1790-1854) —
also known as John W. Cady —
of Johnstown, Fulton
County, N.Y.
Born in Florida, Montgomery
County, N.Y., June 28,
1790.
Lawyer;
member of New York
state assembly from Montgomery and Hamilton counties, 1821-22; U.S.
Representative from New York 16th District, 1823-25.
Died in Johnstown, Fulton
County, N.Y., January
3, 1854 (age 63 years, 189
days).
Interment at Johnstown
Cemetery, Johnstown, N.Y.
|
|
James Gillespie Birney (1792-1857) —
also known as James G. Birney —
of Danville, Boyle
County, Ky.; Huntsville, Madison
County, Ala.; Cincinnati, Hamilton
County, Ohio; New York, New York
County, N.Y.; Lower Saginaw, Saginaw County (now Bay City, Bay
County), Mich.
Born in Danville, Boyle
County, Ky., February
4, 1792.
Lawyer;
studied law in the office of Alexander
J. Dallas in Philadelphia; member of Kentucky
state house of representatives, 1816-18; member of Alabama
state house of representatives, 1819-20; solicitor general of
Alabama, 1823-26; candidate for Presidential Elector for Alabama, 1828;
mayor
of Huntsville, Ala., 1829; abolitionist; Liberty candidate for President
of the United States, 1840, 1844; candidate for Governor of
Michigan, 1843, 1845.
Presbyterian.
Member, Freemasons;
American
Anti-Slavery Society.
While traveling in 1845, the horse he
was riding bucked; he fell and
was injured; his condition worsened over time, leading to tremors and
paralysis, and he died as a result, in Perth Amboy, Middlesex
County, N.J., November
25, 1857 (age 65 years, 294
days).
Interment at Williamsburgh
Cemetery, Groveland, N.Y.
|
|
Thomas Jefferson Randolph (1792-1875) —
also known as Thomas J. Randolph —
of Albemarle
County, Va.
Born in Charlottesville,
Va., September
12, 1792.
Democrat. Planter; delegate
to Virginia state constitutional convention, 1850; delegate
to Virginia secession convention from Albemarle County, 1861;
colonel in the Confederate Army during the Civil War; delegate to
Democratic National Convention from Virginia, 1872.
Slaveowner.
Injured in a carriage
accident, and died soon after, in Albemarle
County, Va., October
7, 1875 (age 83 years, 25
days).
Interment at Monticello
Graveyard, Near Charlottesville, Albemarle County, Va.
|
|
Charles Holker Carroll (1794-1865) —
also known as Charles H. Carroll —
of Groveland Center, Livingston
County, N.Y.
Born in Hagerstown, Washington
County, Md., May 4,
1794.
County judge in New York, 1823-29; member of New York
state senate 8th District, 1827-28; resigned 1828; member of New York
state assembly from Livingston County, 1836; U.S.
Representative from New York 29th District, 1843-47; American
candidate for Presidential Elector for New York, 1856.
Died in Groveland, Livingston
County, N.Y., June 8,
1865 (age 71 years, 35
days).
Interment at Williamsburgh
Cemetery, Groveland, N.Y.
|
|
Thomas Alexander Marshall (1794-1871) —
also known as Thomas A. Marshall —
of Paris, Bourbon
County, Ky.
Born near Versailles, Woodford
County, Ky., January
15, 1794.
Member of Kentucky
state house of representatives, 1827; U.S.
Representative from Kentucky, 1831-35 (2nd District 1831-33, 12th
District 1833-35); state court judge in Kentucky, 1835.
Slaveowner.
Died April
17, 1871 (age 77 years, 92
days).
Interment at Lexington
Cemetery, Lexington, Ky.
|
|
Richard Henry Bayard (1796-1868) —
also known as Richard H. Bayard —
of Wilmington, New Castle
County, Del.
Born in Wilmington, New Castle
County, Del., September
26, 1796.
Whig. Mayor
of Wilmington, Del., 1832-34; U.S.
Senator from Delaware, 1836-39, 1841-45; justice of
Delaware state supreme court, 1839-41; U.S. Charge d'Affaires to
Belgium, 1851-53.
Died in Philadelphia, Philadelphia
County, Pa., March 4,
1868 (age 71 years, 160
days).
Entombed at Wilmington
and Brandywine Cemetery, Wilmington, Del.
|
|
Edward Livingston (1796-1840) —
of Albany
County, N.Y.
Born in Dutchess
County, N.Y., April 3,
1796.
Lawyer;
clerk of the New York State Assembly, 1822-25 and 1826-28; Albany
County District Attorney, 1825-38; member of New York
state assembly from Albany County, 1833, 1835, 1837; Speaker of
the New York State Assembly, 1837.
Died in Albany, Albany
County, N.Y., June 16,
1840 (age 44 years, 74
days).
Burial location unknown.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Philip Henry Livingston and Maria (Livingston) Livingston; married
to Sarah Ray Lansing (daughter of John
Ten Eyck Lansing Jr.); nephew of Henry
Walter Livingston and Edward
Philip Livingston; grandson of Walter
Livingston; grandnephew of Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794) and Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792); great-grandson of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790) and Philip
Livingston; great-grandnephew of Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, William
Livingston, Philip
John Schuyler, Philip
P. Schuyler and Stephen
John Schuyler; second great-grandson of Dirck
Ten Broeck and Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746); second great-grandnephew of John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775) and Gilbert
Livingston; third great-grandson of Stephanus
Van Cortlandt, Robert
Livingston the Elder, Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724), Pieter
Van Brugh and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); third great-grandnephew of Jacobus
Van Cortlandt and Johannes
Cuyler; fourth great-grandson of Dirck
Wesselse Ten Broeck; first cousin once removed of Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer and Rensselaer
Westerlo; first cousin twice removed of Philip
Peter Livingston, James
Livingston, Henry
Brockholst Livingston, Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler, Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870), Bronson
Murray Cutting and Robert
Reginald Livingston; first cousin thrice removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775), Pierre
Van Cortlandt and Brockholst
Livingston; first cousin four times removed of Robert
Livingston the Younger, Cornelis
Cuyler and John
Cruger Jr.; first cousin five times removed of David
Davidse Schuyler and Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler; second cousin of Philip
Schuyler, Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859) and Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer; second cousin once removed of Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843), William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, James
Alexander Hamilton, William
Jay, Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873) and Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer; second cousin twice removed of Nicholas
Bayard, Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), Philip
Van Cortlandt, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., Edward
Livingston (1764-1836), James
Parker and Herbert
Livingston Satterlee; second cousin thrice removed of Volkert
Petrus Douw, James
Jay, Henry
Cruger, Hendrick
Kiliaen Van Rensselaer, John
Jay, Frederick
Jay, Killian
Killian Van Rensselaer and John
Eliot Thayer Jr.; third cousin of Gerrit
Smith, William
Duer, Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard, Elizabeth
Cady Stanton and John
Jay II; third cousin once removed of Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Maturin
Livingston, Peter
Gansevoort, Hamilton
Fish, John
Cortlandt Parker, Nicholas
Fish, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936), Robert
Ray Hamilton, John
Kean and Hamilton
Fish Kean; third cousin twice removed of Leonard
Gansevoort, Leonard
Gansevoort Jr., Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933), Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991) and Robert
Winthrop Kean; third cousin thrice removed of Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996) and Thomas
Howard Kean; fourth cousin of Gilbert
Livingston Thompson, James
Adams Ekin, John
Jacob Astor III, Richard
Wayne Parker and Charles
Wolcott Parker; fourth cousin once removed of George
Washington Schuyler, Philip
N. Schuyler, William
Waldorf Astor, John
Sluyter Wirt, Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer and Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright. |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Lansing
family of Albany, New York (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also Wikipedia article |
|
|
Richard Hawes (1797-1877) —
of Winchester, Clark
County, Ky.
Born near Bowling Green, Caroline
County, Va., February
6, 1797.
Lawyer;
member of Kentucky
state house of representatives, 1828; U.S.
Representative from Kentucky 10th District, 1837-41; Confederate
provisional governor of Kentucky, 1862-65.
Slaveowner.
Died in Paris, Bourbon
County, Ky., May 25,
1877 (age 80 years, 108
days).
Interment at Paris
Cemetery, Paris, Ky.
|
 |
Gerrit Smith (1797-1874) —
of Peterboro, Madison
County, N.Y.
Born in Utica, Oneida
County, N.Y., March 6,
1797.
Lawyer;
hotelier;
abolitionist; candidate for Governor of
New York, 1840 (Liberty), 1858; Liberty candidate for President
of the United States, 1848, 1856; U.S.
Representative from New York 22nd District, 1853-54; resigned
1854; delegate to Republican National Convention from New York, 1872.
Died in New York, New York
County, N.Y., December
28, 1874 (age 77 years, 297
days).
Interment at Peterboro
Cemetery, Peterboro, N.Y.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Peter Gerrit Smith and Elizabeth (Livingston) Smith; married 1822 to Ann
Carroll Fitzhugh (sister of Henry
Fitzhugh); grandson of James
Livingston; second great-grandson of Robert
Livingston the Younger and Dirck
Ten Broeck; third great-grandson of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724); third great-grandnephew of Robert
Livingston the Elder and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); fourth great-grandson of Dirck
Wesselse Ten Broeck; first cousin of Elizabeth
Cady Stanton; first cousin twice removed of Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer and Robert
Van Rensselaer; first cousin thrice removed of Philip
P. Schuyler; first cousin four times removed of John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775), Gilbert
Livingston, Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746) and Cornelis
Cuyler; first cousin five times removed of David
Davidse Schuyler and Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler; second cousin once removed of Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), Edward
Livingston (1764-1836), Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler, Maturin
Livingston, Rensselaer
Westerlo and Edward
Philip Livingston; second cousin twice removed of Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792) and Peter
Samuel Schuyler; second cousin thrice removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Philip
Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775), Pierre
Van Cortlandt, William
Livingston, Philip
John Schuyler, Matthew
Clarkson (1733-1800) and Stephen
John Schuyler; third cousin of Philip
Schuyler, James
Alexander Hamilton, Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Edward
Livingston (1796-1840), Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer and Nicholas
Cornelius Blauvelt; third cousin once removed of Henry
Walter Livingston, Peter
Gansevoort, John
Jacob Astor III, John
Dewitt Blauvelt, Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer and Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer; third cousin twice removed of Nicholas
Bayard, Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, Philip
Van Cortlandt, Henry
Brockholst Livingston, Matthew
Clarkson (1758-1825), Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., James
Parker, William
Waldorf Astor, Robert
Ray Hamilton, Peter
Goelet Gerry, Ogden
Livingston Mills and Robert
Reginald Livingston; third cousin thrice removed of William
Astor Chanler, Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler, Helen
Roosevelt Robinson and John
Eliot Thayer Jr.; fourth cousin once removed of Peter
Augustus Jay, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, William
Jay, Charles
Ludlow Livingston, Hamilton
Fish, George
Washington Schuyler, John
Cortlandt Parker and Philip
N. Schuyler. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Wikipedia article — NNDB
dossier — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|  | Image source: New York Public
Library |
|
|
James Asheton Bayard Jr. (1799-1880) —
also known as James A. Bayard —
of Wilmington, New Castle
County, Del.
Born in Wilmington, New Castle
County, Del., November
15, 1799.
Democrat. Lawyer; U.S.
Attorney for Delaware, 1837-43; U.S.
Senator from Delaware, 1851-64, 1867-69; delegate to Democratic
National Convention from Delaware, 1860,
1864,
1868.
Suffered an accidental fall while
descending stairs, and died a few days later, in Wilmington, New Castle
County, Del., June 13,
1880 (age 80 years, 211
days).
Interment at Old
Swedes Church Cemetery, Wilmington, Del.
|
|
Andrew Jackson Donelson (1799-1871) —
also known as Andrew J. Donelson —
of Nashville, Davidson
County, Tenn.; Memphis, Shelby
County, Tenn.
Born in Nashville, Davidson
County, Tenn., August
25, 1799.
Whig. Lawyer;
U.S. Charge d'Affaires to Texas Republic, 1844-45; U.S. Minister to Prussia, 1846-49; candidate for Vice
President of the United States, 1856.
Died, of a heart
attack, in Memphis, Shelby
County, Tenn., June 26,
1871 (age 71 years, 305
days).
Interment at Elmwood
Cemetery, Memphis, Tenn.
|
|
Charles Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873) —
also known as Charles L. Livingston —
of New York, New York
County, N.Y.
Born in 1800.
Lawyer;
member of New York
state assembly from New York County, 1829-33; member of New York
state senate 1st District, 1834-37.
Died in 1873
(age about
73 years).
Interment at Trinity
Churchyard, Manhattan, N.Y.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Philip
Peter Livingston and Cornelia (Van Horne) Livingston; married to
Margaret Allen; nephew of Catherine Livingston (who married Nicholas
Bayard) and Susanna Livingston (who married John
Kean (1756-1795)); grandson of Peter
Van Brugh Livingston; grandnephew of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Philip
Livingston and William
Livingston; great-grandson of James
Alexander; great-grandnephew of John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775) and Gilbert
Livingston; second great-grandson of Robert
Livingston the Elder and Pieter
Van Brugh; second great-grandnephew of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724), Abraham
de Peyster, Johannes
Cuyler, Johannes
de Peyster and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); first cousin once removed of Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, John
Stevens III and Henry
Brockholst Livingston; first cousin twice removed of Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775), Nicholas
Fish, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936), John
Kean (1852-1914) and Hamilton
Fish Kean; first cousin thrice removed of Robert
Livingston the Younger, Johannes
DePeyster, Cornelis
Cuyler, Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746), John
Cruger Jr., Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991) and Robert
Winthrop Kean; first cousin four times removed of David
Davidse Schuyler, Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996) and Thomas
Howard Kean; first cousin five times removed of Hamilton
Fish (born 1951), Alexa
Fish Ward and Thomas
Howard Kean Jr.; second cousin of Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Henry
Walter Livingston, Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843), Rensselaer
Westerlo, Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer and William
Jay; second cousin once removed of Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), Philip
Van Cortlandt, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., Edward
Livingston (1764-1836), Philip
Schuyler, Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Edward
Livingston (1796-1840), William
Duer, Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer, Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard and John
Jay II; second cousin twice removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Pierre
Van Cortlandt, Matthew
Clarkson, Philip
John Schuyler, Philip
P. Schuyler, Stephen
John Schuyler, Henry
Cruger, Henry
Rutgers, Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870); second cousin thrice removed of Herbert
Livingston Satterlee, Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933), Bronson
Murray Cutting, Robert
Reginald Livingston and Brockholst
Livingston; second cousin four times removed of John
Eliot Thayer Jr.; third cousin of Hamilton
Fish (1808-1893); third cousin once removed of Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792), James
Livingston, Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler, Philip
DePeyster, James
Parker, Gilbert
Livingston Thompson and John
Jacob Astor III; third cousin twice removed of William
Waldorf Astor and Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright; third cousin thrice removed of Guy
Vernor Henry, William
Astor Chanler, Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler, Montgomery
Schuyler Jr., Peter
Goelet Gerry, Helen
Roosevelt Robinson and Ogden
Livingston Mills; fourth cousin of Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Maturin
Livingston, James
Alexander Hamilton, George
Washington Schuyler, John
Cortlandt Parker and Philip
N. Schuyler; fourth cousin once removed of Gerrit
Smith, Elizabeth
Cady Stanton, James
Adams Ekin, Eugene
Schuyler, Richard
Wayne Parker and Charles
Wolcott Parker. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
William Stephen Hamilton (d. 1850) —
of Wisconsin.
Colonel in the U.S. Army during the Black Hawk War; member of Wisconsin
territorial legislature, 1840; went
to California for the 1849 Gold Rush.
Died in Sacramento, Sacramento
County, Calif., October
7, 1850.
Interment at Sacramento
City Cemetery, Sacramento, Calif.
|
|
Nicholas Philip Trist (1800-1874) —
also known as Nicholas P. Trist —
of Alexandria,
Va.
Born in Albemarle
County, Va., 1800.
Republican. U.S. Consul in Havana, 1833-41; U.S. Special Diplomatic Agent to Cuba, 1834; postmaster at Alexandria,
Va., 1870-74.
Died in 1874
(age about
74 years).
Burial location unknown.
|
|
James Keith Marshall (1800-1862) —
Born in Richmond,
Va., February
13, 1800.
Member of Virginia
state senate, 1850.
Died in Fauquier
County, Va., December
2, 1862 (age 62 years, 292
days).
Interment a
private or family graveyard, Fauquier County, Va.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of John
Marshall and Mary Willis (Ambler) Marshall; brother of Thomas
Marshall; married, December
22, 1821, to Claudia Hamilton Burwell; nephew of James
Markham Marshall and Alexander
Keith Marshall; grandson of Jacquelin
Ambler; great-grandnephew of Robert
Carter Nicholas (1729-1780); second great-grandnephew of Richard
Randolph; first cousin once removed of John
Augustine Marshall; first cousin twice removed of George
Nicholas, Wilson
Cary Nicholas, John
Nicholas, William
Marshall Bullitt and Alexander
Scott Bullitt; first cousin thrice removed of Richard
Bland, Peyton
Randolph (1721-1775), Benjamin
Harrison (1726-1791) and William
Fitzhugh; second cousin once removed of Thomas
Mann Randolph Jr., Peyton
Randolph (1779-1828) and Robert
Carter Nicholas (1787-1857); second cousin twice removed of Theodorick
Bland, Thomas
Jefferson, Edmund
Jenings Randolph, Beverley
Randolph, Carter
Bassett Harrison, William
Henry Harrison and John
Randolph of Roanoke; third cousin of Benjamin
Franklin Randolph, Meriwether
Lewis Randolph, Peter
Myndert Dox, George
Wythe Randolph and Edmund
Randolph; third cousin once removed of Henry
Lee, Charles
Lee, Richard
Bland Lee, Burwell
Bassett, Edmund
Jennings Lee, Martha
Jefferson Randolph, Dabney
Carr, Henry
St. George Tucker, John
Scott Harrison (1804-1878), Thomas
Jefferson Coolidge, Edmund
Randolph Cocke and Harry
Bartow Hawes; third cousin twice removed of John
Gardner Coolidge and Francis
Beverley Biddle; fourth cousin of Francis
Wayles Eppes, Dabney
Smith Carr, Nathaniel
Beverly Tucker, Carter
Henry Harrison, Benjamin
Harrison (1833-1901), William
Henry Fitzhugh Lee, John
Breckinridge Castleman and John
Scott Harrison (1844-1926); fourth cousin once removed of John
Wayles Eppes, Fitzhugh
Lee, Connally
Findlay Trigg, Russell
Benjamin Harrison, Carter
Henry Harrison II, Richard
Evelyn Byrd, Frederick
Madison Roberts and William
Welby Beverley. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|
|
Thomas Francis Marshall (1801-1864) —
of Versailles, Woodford
County, Ky.; Louisville, Jefferson
County, Ky.; Chicago, Cook
County, Ill.
Born in Frankfort, Franklin
County, Ky., June 7,
1801.
Lawyer;
member of Kentucky
state house of representatives, 1832-36, 1838-39, 1854; U.S.
Representative from Kentucky 10th District, 1841-43; served in
the U.S. Army during the Mexican War.
Slaveowner.
Died near Versailles, Woodford
County, Ky., September
22, 1864 (age 63 years, 107
days).
Interment at Frankfort
Cemetery, Frankfort, Ky.
|
|
Henry Fitzhugh (1801-1866) —
of Oswego, Oswego
County, N.Y.
Born in Washington
County, Md., August
7, 1801.
Member of New York
state assembly from Oswego County 1st District, 1849; New York
State Canal Commissioner, 1852-57; mayor of
Oswego, N.Y., 1859-61; postmaster at Oswego,
N.Y., 1861-65.
Died August
11, 1866 (age 65 years, 4
days).
Interment at Williamsburgh
Cemetery, Groveland, N.Y.
|
|
Francis Wayles Eppes (1801-1881) —
also known as Francis W. Eppes —
of Tallahassee, Leon
County, Fla.
Born near Charlottesville, Albemarle
County, Va., September
20, 1801.
Cotton
planter;
justice of the peace; mayor
of Tallahassee, Fla., 1841-44, 1856-57, 1866.
Died May 30,
1881 (age 79 years, 252
days).
Interment at Greenwood
Cemetery, Orlando, Fla.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of John
Wayles Eppes and Maria (Jefferson) Eppes; married, November
18, 1822, to Mary Elizabeth Cleland Randolph; married 1837 to Susan
Margaret (Ware) Crouch (daughter of Nicholas
Ware); nephew of Martha
Jefferson Randolph; grandson of Thomas
Jefferson; second great-grandnephew of Richard
Randolph; first cousin of Benjamin
Franklin Randolph, Meriwether
Lewis Randolph and George
Wythe Randolph; first cousin once removed of Dabney
Carr, Thomas
Jefferson Coolidge and Frederick
Madison Roberts; first cousin twice removed of Beverley
Randolph and John
Gardner Coolidge; first cousin thrice removed of Richard
Bland and Peyton
Randolph (1721-1775); second cousin of Dabney
Smith Carr; second cousin twice removed of Theodorick
Bland, Edmund
Jenings Randolph, John
Randolph of Roanoke and Edith
Wilson; third cousin of John
Jordan Crittenden, John
Robertson, Thomas
Turpin Crittenden, Robert
Crittenden, Carter
Henry Harrison and John
Breckinridge Castleman; third cousin once removed of John
Marshall, Henry
Lee, Charles
Lee, Richard
Bland Lee, James
Markham Marshall, Thomas
Mann Randolph Jr., Alexander
Keith Marshall, Edmund
Jennings Lee, Peyton
Randolph (1779-1828), Henry
St. George Tucker, Alexander
Parker Crittenden, Thomas
Leonidas Crittenden, Thomas
Theodore Crittenden, William
Henry Fitzhugh Lee, Archelaus
Marius Woodson, Carter
Henry Harrison II and Douglass
Townshend Bolling; third cousin twice removed of Thomas
Lawton Davis, Connally
Findlay Trigg, Thomas
Theodore Crittenden Jr. and Richard
Walker Bolling; third cousin thrice removed of William
Welby Beverley; fourth cousin of Thomas
Marshall, Benjamin
William Sheridan Cabell, James
Keith Marshall, Edmund
Randolph and Nathaniel
Beverly Tucker; fourth cousin once removed of Thomas
Jones Hardeman, Bailey
Hardeman, William
Lewis Cabell, Fitzhugh
Lee, George
Craighead Cabell, Edmund
Randolph Cocke, John
Augustine Marshall and William
Henry Robertson. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also Wikipedia
article — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Dabney Smith Carr (1802-1854) —
of Maryland.
Born in Albemarle
County, Va., March 5,
1802.
Newspaper
publisher; U.S. Minister to Turkey, 1843-49.
Died in Charlottesville,
Va., March
24, 1854 (age 52 years, 19
days).
Interment at Monticello
Graveyard, Near Charlottesville, Albemarle County, Va.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Hester (Smith) Carr and Peter Carr; married to Sidney Smith
Nichols; nephew of Dabney
Carr; grandnephew of Thomas
Jefferson; second great-grandnephew of Richard
Randolph; first cousin once removed of Martha
Jefferson Randolph; first cousin thrice removed of Richard
Bland and Peyton
Randolph (1721-1775); second cousin of Francis
Wayles Eppes, Benjamin
Franklin Randolph, Meriwether
Lewis Randolph and George
Wythe Randolph; second cousin once removed of Thomas
Jefferson Coolidge and Frederick
Madison Roberts; second cousin twice removed of Theodorick
Bland, Edmund
Jenings Randolph, Beverley
Randolph, John
Randolph of Roanoke, John
Gardner Coolidge and Edith
Wilson; third cousin of John
Jordan Crittenden, Thomas
Turpin Crittenden, Robert
Crittenden, Carter
Henry Harrison and John
Breckinridge Castleman; third cousin once removed of John
Marshall, Henry
Lee, Charles
Lee, Richard
Bland Lee, James
Markham Marshall, Thomas
Mann Randolph Jr., Alexander
Keith Marshall, Edmund
Jennings Lee, Peyton
Randolph (1779-1828), Henry
St. George Tucker, Alexander
Parker Crittenden, Thomas
Leonidas Crittenden, Thomas
Theodore Crittenden, Archelaus
Marius Woodson and Carter
Henry Harrison II; third cousin twice removed of Thomas
Theodore Crittenden Jr.; fourth cousin of Thomas
Marshall, James
Keith Marshall, Edmund
Randolph and Nathaniel
Beverly Tucker; fourth cousin once removed of John
Wayles Eppes, Fitzhugh
Lee, William
Henry Fitzhugh Lee, Edmund
Randolph Cocke and John
Augustine Marshall. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also U.S. State Dept career summary |
|
|
Albert Sidney Johnston (1803-1862) —
of Texas.
Born in Washington, Mason
County, Ky., February
2, 1803.
Served in the U.S. Army during the Black Hawk War; served in the
Texas Army during the Texas War of Independence; wounded in a duel
with Texas Gen. Felix Huston, Februay 7, 1837; Texas
Republic Secretary of War, 1838-40; general in the Confederate
Army during the Civil War.
Shot
and killed
while leading his forces at the Battle of Shiloh, Hardin
County, Tenn., April 6,
1862 (age 59 years, 63
days). He was the highest-ranking officer on either side killed
during the war.
Original interment at St.
Louis Cemetery No. 1, New Orleans, La.; reinterment in 1867 at Texas
State Cemetery, Austin, Tex.; statue at South Mall, University of Texas, Austin, Tex.
|
|
John Scott Harrison (1804-1878) —
of Cleves, Hamilton
County, Ohio.
Born in Vincennes, Knox
County, Ind., October
4, 1804.
Farmer;
U.S.
Representative from Ohio 2nd District, 1853-57.
Died near North Bend, Hamilton
County, Ohio, May 25,
1878 (age 73 years, 233
days).
Interment at Harrison
Tomb, North Bend, Ohio.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of William
Henry Harrison (1773-1841) and Anna
Harrison; married 1824 to
Lucretia Knapp; married, August
12, 1831, to Elizabeth Ramsey Irwin; father of Benjamin
Harrison (1833-1901) and John
Scott Harrison (1844-1926); nephew of Carter
Bassett Harrison; grandson of Benjamin
Harrison (1726-1791) and John
Cleves Symmes; grandfather of Russell
Benjamin Harrison; great-grandfather of William
Henry Harrison (1896-1990); first cousin once removed of Beverley
Randolph and Burwell
Bassett; first cousin twice removed of Robert
Carter Nicholas (1729-1780) and William
Fitzhugh; second cousin once removed of George
Nicholas, Wilson
Cary Nicholas, John
Nicholas, Carter
Henry Harrison and John
Breckinridge Castleman; second cousin twice removed of Carter
Henry Harrison II; third cousin of Peyton
Randolph and Robert
Carter Nicholas (1787-1857); third cousin once removed of Thomas
Marshall, James
Keith Marshall, Peter
Myndert Dox, Edmund
Randolph and William
Henry Fitzhugh Lee; third cousin twice removed of Edmund
Randolph Cocke, Connally
Findlay Trigg, Richard
Evelyn Byrd, Harry
Bartow Hawes and William
Welby Beverley; third cousin thrice removed of Francis
Beverley Biddle and Harry
Flood Byrd; fourth cousin once removed of Bertha
Mapes. |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Breckinridge-Preston-Harrison-Richardson
family of Virginia; Washington
family of Virginia (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Wikipedia article |
|
|
Albert Gallatin Hawes (1804-1849) —
also known as Albert G. Hawes —
of Hawesville, Hancock
County, Ky.
Born near Bowling Green, Caroline
County, Va., April 1,
1804.
Lawyer;
U.S.
Representative from Kentucky, 1831-37 (11th District 1831-33, 2nd
District 1833-37).
Slaveowner.
Died in Daviess
County, Ky., March
14, 1849 (age 44 years, 347
days).
Interment at Hawes-Taylor Cemetery, Daviess County, Ky.
|
|
Henry Brewster Stanton (1805-1887) —
also known as Henry B. Stanton —
of Seneca Falls, Seneca
County, N.Y.
Born in Griswold, New London
County, Conn., June 27,
1805.
Journalist;
orator;
lawyer;
member of New York
state senate 25th District, 1850-51, 1851; resigned 1851.
Died, of pneumonia,
in New York, New York
County, N.Y., January
14, 1887 (age 81 years, 201
days).
Interment at Woodlawn
Cemetery, Bronx, N.Y.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Susan M. (Brewster) Stanton and Joseph Stanton; married, May 1,
1840, to Elizabeth
Smith Cady; fifth great-grandnephew of Robert
Treat; first cousin once removed of Nathan
Belcher; second cousin once removed of Erskine
Mason Phelps; second cousin four times removed of Waightstill
Avery; third cousin of Enoch
C. Chapman; third cousin once removed of Jeremiah
Mason, Edward
Wheeler Pendleton and Giles
Russell Taggart; third cousin twice removed of John
Adams, George
Champlin and John
Baldwin; fourth cousin of Albert
Gallup; fourth cousin once removed of David
Hough, John
Taintor, Roger
Taintor, John
Quincy Adams, Christopher
Grant Champlin, Solomon
Taintor, Daniel
Cady, Daniel
Packer, Jabez
Williams Huntington, Lorenzo
Burrows, Asa
Packer, Albert
Smith Gallup and Abial
T. Browning. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also Wikipedia
article — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
John White Brockenbrough (1806-1877) —
of Virginia.
Born in Hanover
County, Va., December
23, 1806.
Lawyer;
newspaper
editor; law
professor; U.S.
District Judge for the Western District of Virginia, 1846-61;
resigned 1861; Delegate
from Virginia to the Confederate Provisional Congress, 1861-62;
Confederate
District Judge, 1861.
Died in Lexington,
Va., February
20, 1877 (age 70 years, 59
days).
Interment at Oak
Grove Cemetery, Lexington, Va.
|
|
William Marshall Anderson (1807-1881) —
also known as W. Marshall Anderson —
of Chillicothe, Ross
County, Ohio; Circleville, Pickaway
County, Ohio.
Born in Louisville, Jefferson
County, Ky., January
24, 1807.
Lawyer;
explorer;
surveyor;
candidate for Congress from Ohio.
Catholic.
Died in Ohio, January
7, 1881 (age 73 years, 349
days).
Interment at Oak
Dale Cemetery, Urbana, Ohio.
|
 |
Hamilton Fish (1808-1893) —
of New York, New York
County, N.Y.
Born in New York, New York
County, N.Y., August
3, 1808.
Lawyer;
candidate for New York
state assembly, 1834; U.S.
Representative from New York 6th District, 1843-45; Lieutenant
Governor of New York, 1848; defeated (Whig), 1846; Governor of
New York, 1849-51; U.S.
Senator from New York, 1851-57; U.S.
Secretary of State, 1869-77.
Episcopalian.
Member, Society
of the Cincinnati.
Died in Garrison, Putnam
County, N.Y., September
7, 1893 (age 85 years, 35
days).
Interment at St.
Philip's Cemetery, Garrison, N.Y.
|  |
Presumably named
for: Alexander
Hamilton |
|  | Relatives: Son of Nicholas
Fish (1758-1833) and Elizabeth (Stuyvesant) Fish; married to
Julia Kean (great-granddaughter of Peter
Van Brugh Livingston (1710-1792)); father of Nicholas
Fish (1848-1902) and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936); uncle of Helen Neilson (who married David
Maitland Armstrong); grandfather of Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991); grandnephew of Robert
Gilbert Livingston and Henry
Gilbert Livingston; great-grandson of Gilbert
Livingston; great-grandfather of Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996); great-grandnephew of John
Livingston and Robert
Livingston (1688-1775); second great-grandson of Robert
Livingston the Elder; second great-grandfather of Hamilton
Fish (born 1951) and Alexa
Fish Ward; second great-grandnephew of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724) and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); third great-grandson of Pieter
Stuyvesant; first cousin of Margaret Cornelia Winthrop (who
married George
Folsom); first cousin once removed of Philip
Van Cortlandt and Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr.; first cousin twice removed of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston (1710-1792), Philip
Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775), William
Livingston and Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright; first cousin thrice removed of Robert
Livingston the Younger and Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746); first cousin four times removed of Nicholas
Bayard (c.1644-1707), David
Davidse Schuyler and Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler; second cousin once removed of James
Jay, Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, John
Jay, Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), Frederick
Jay, Henry
Brockholst Livingston, Edward
Livingston (1764-1836) and Gilbert
Livingston Thompson; second cousin twice removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Pierre
Van Cortlandt, Philip
John Schuyler, Philip
P. Schuyler and Stephen
John Schuyler; second cousin thrice removed of Guy
Vernor Henry and Montgomery
Schuyler Jr.; third cousin of Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Henry
Walter Livingston, Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843), Rensselaer
Westerlo, Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, William
Jay and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873); third cousin once removed of Nicholas
Bayard (1736-1802), Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792), James
Livingston, Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler, James
Parker, 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; third cousin twice removed of Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer, William
Waldorf Astor, John
Kean, Hamilton
Fish Kean and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870); third cousin thrice removed of Herbert
Livingston Satterlee, William
Astor Chanler, Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler, Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933), Peter
Goelet Gerry, Helen
Roosevelt Robinson, Ogden
Livingston Mills, Robert
Reginald Livingston, Bronson
Murray Cutting, Robert
Winthrop Kean and Brockholst
Livingston; fourth cousin of Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Maturin
Livingston, James
Alexander Hamilton, George
Washington Schuyler, John
Cortlandt Parker and Philip
N. Schuyler; fourth cousin once removed of John
Bubenheim Bayard, Gerrit
Smith, Elizabeth
Cady Stanton, James
Adams Ekin, Eugene
Schuyler, Richard
Wayne Parker and Charles
Wolcott Parker. |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Chapin-Fish
family of New York City, New York (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | Cross-reference: John
Davis |
|  | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — National Governors
Association biography — Wikipedia
article — NNDB
dossier — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|  | Image source: New York Red Book
1896 |
|
|
Alexander Keith Marshall (1808-1884) —
of Nicholasville, Jessamine
County, Ky.
Born near Versailles, Woodford
County, Ky., February
11, 1808.
Physician;
delegate
to Kentucky state constitutional convention, 1849; U.S.
Representative from Kentucky 8th District, 1855-57; defeated,
1847.
Slaveowner.
Died near East Hickman, Fayette
County, Ky., April
28, 1884 (age 76 years, 77
days).
Interment at Lexington
Cemetery, Lexington, Ky.
|
|
Benjamin Franklin Randolph (1808-1871) —
also known as Benjamin F. Randolph —
of Albemarle
County, Va.
Born in Albemarle
County, Va., July 16,
1808.
Member of Virginia
state senate from Albemarle County, 1853-56.
Died in Albemarle
County, Va., February
18, 1871 (age 62 years, 217
days).
Interment at Christ
Episcopal Church Cemetery, Keene, Va.
|  |
Presumably named
for: Benjamin
Franklin |
|  | Relatives: Son of Thomas
Mann Randolph Jr. and Martha
Jefferson Randolph; brother of Meriwether
Lewis Randolph and George
Wythe Randolph; married to Sarah Champe Carter; uncle of Thomas
Jefferson Coolidge; grandson of Thomas
Jefferson; granduncle of John
Gardner Coolidge; great-grandson of Archibald
Cary; second great-grandson of Richard
Randolph; first cousin of Francis
Wayles Eppes; first cousin once removed of Dabney
Carr, John
Wayles Eppes and Frederick
Madison Roberts; first cousin twice removed of John
Randolph of Roanoke; first cousin thrice removed of Richard
Bland and Peyton
Randolph (1721-1775); second cousin of Dabney
Smith Carr; second cousin once removed of John
Marshall, James
Markham Marshall and Alexander
Keith Marshall; second cousin twice removed of Theodorick
Bland, Edmund
Jenings Randolph, Beverley
Randolph and Edith
Wilson; third cousin of Thomas
Marshall, John
Jordan Crittenden, Thomas
Turpin Crittenden, Robert
Crittenden, James
Keith Marshall, Carter
Henry Harrison and John
Breckinridge Castleman; third cousin once removed of Henry
Lee, Charles
Lee, Richard
Bland Lee, Edmund
Jennings Lee, Peyton
Randolph (1779-1828), Henry
St. George Tucker, John
Robertson, Benjamin
William Sheridan Cabell, Alexander
Parker Crittenden, Thomas
Leonidas Crittenden, Thomas
Theodore Crittenden, Archelaus
Marius Woodson, John
Augustine Marshall and Carter
Henry Harrison II; third cousin twice removed of Thomas
Theodore Crittenden Jr., William
Marshall Bullitt and Alexander
Scott Bullitt; fourth cousin of Nathaniel
Beverly Tucker, Edmund
Randolph, William
Lewis Cabell and George
Craighead Cabell; fourth cousin once removed of Thomas
Jones Hardeman, Bailey
Hardeman, Fitzhugh
Lee, William
Henry Fitzhugh Lee, Joel
Walker Flood, Edmund
Randolph Cocke, Benjamin
Earl Cabell and William
Henry Robertson. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Alexander Keith McClung (1809-1855) —
also known as Alexander K. McClung; "The Black Knight
of the South" —
of Mississippi.
Born in Virginia, 1809.
Lawyer;
colonel in the U.S. Army during the Mexican War; U.S. Charge
d'Affaires to Bolivia, 1849-51.
Killed his opponents in a number of duels.
Died from a self-inflicted
gunshot,
with a dueling pistol, in a hotel
room at Jackson, Hinds
County, Miss., March
23, 1855 (age about 45
years).
Interment at Friendship
Cemetery, Columbus, Miss.
|
|
Charles Alexander Marshall (b. 1809) —
of Kentucky.
Born May 2,
1809.
Member of Kentucky
state house of representatives, 1840, 1855, 1859; served in the
Union Army during the Civil War.
Burial location unknown.
|
|
Henry Bell Van Rensselaer (1810-1864) —
of New York.
Born in Albany, Albany
County, N.Y., May 14,
1810.
U.S.
Representative from New York 14th District, 1841-43; mining
business; railroad
promoter; colonel in the Union Army during the Civil War.
Died, from typhoid
fever, in Cincinnati, Hamilton
County, Ohio, March
24, 1864 (age 53 years, 315
days).
Interment at Grace
Church Cemetery, Jamaica, Queens, N.Y.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Stephen
Van Rensselaer and Cornelia (Paterson) Van Rensselaer; married,
August
22, 1833, to Elizabeth Ray King (daughter of John
Alsop King); nephew of Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer and Rensselaer
Westerlo; uncle of Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer; grandson of William
Paterson; great-grandson of Philip
Livingston; great-grandnephew of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston and William
Livingston; great-granduncle of John
Eliot Thayer Jr.; second great-grandson of Dirck
Ten Broeck; second great-grandnephew of John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775) and Gilbert
Livingston; third great-grandson of Stephanus
Van Cortlandt, Robert
Livingston the Elder and Pieter
Van Brugh; third great-grandnephew of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724), Jacobus
Van Cortlandt, Johannes
Cuyler and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); fourth great-grandson of Dirck
Wesselse Ten Broeck; first cousin of Philip
Schuyler; first cousin once removed of Edward
Philip Livingston; first cousin twice removed of Philip
P. Schuyler, Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, James
Livingston and Henry
Brockholst Livingston; first cousin thrice removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775), Pierre
Van Cortlandt, Philip
John Schuyler and Stephen
John Schuyler; first cousin four times removed of Robert
Livingston the Younger, Cornelis
Cuyler, Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746) and John
Cruger Jr.; first cousin five times removed of David
Davidse Schuyler and Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler; second cousin of Edward
Livingston (1796-1840); second cousin once removed of Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792), Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Henry
Walter Livingston, Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843), William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, William
Jay and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873); second cousin twice removed of Volkert
Petrus Douw, Nicholas
Bayard, Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Hendrick
Kiliaen Van Rensselaer, Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), Philip
Van Cortlandt, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., Killian
Killian Van Rensselaer, Edward
Livingston (1764-1836), Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler, James
Parker and Robert
Reginald Livingston; second cousin thrice removed of James
Jay, Henry
Cruger, John
Jay and Frederick
Jay; third cousin of Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Gerrit
Smith, William
Duer, Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard, Elizabeth
Cady Stanton and John
Jay II; third cousin once removed of Leonard
Gansevoort, Leonard
Gansevoort Jr., Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, James
Alexander Hamilton, Peter
Gansevoort, Hamilton
Fish, John
Cortlandt Parker, Nicholas
Fish, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936), John
Kean, Hamilton
Fish Kean and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870); third cousin twice removed of Herbert
Livingston Satterlee, Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933), Bronson
Murray Cutting, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991), Robert
Winthrop Kean and Brockholst
Livingston; third cousin thrice removed of Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996) and Thomas
Howard Kean; fourth cousin of Gilbert
Livingston Thompson, James
Adams Ekin, John
Jacob Astor III, Richard
Wayne Parker and Charles
Wolcott Parker; fourth cousin once removed of Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Maturin
Livingston, George
Washington Schuyler, Philip
N. Schuyler, William
Waldorf Astor, Robert
Ray Hamilton, John
Sluyter Wirt, Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer and Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright. |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; King
family of Jamaica and New York City, New York (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page |
|
|
George Washington Schuyler (1810-1888) —
also known as George W. Schuyler —
of Ithaca, Tompkins
County, N.Y.
Born February
2, 1810.
Republican. Delegate to Republican National Convention from New York,
1860;
New
York state treasurer, 1864-65; member of New York
state assembly from Tompkins County, 1875.
Died in Ithaca, Tompkins
County, N.Y., February
1, 1888 (age 77 years, 364
days).
Interment at Ithaca
City Cemetery, Ithaca, N.Y.
|  |
Presumably named
for: George
Washington |
|  | Relatives: Son of John Harmanus
Schuyler and Annatje (Fort) Schuyler; married to Matilda Scribner;
father of Eugene
Schuyler; granduncle of Karl
Cortlandt Schuyler; second great-grandnephew of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724) and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); first cousin thrice removed of John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775), Gilbert
Livingston and Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746); first cousin four times removed of David
Davidse Schuyler and Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler; second cousin twice removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Philip
Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775), Pierre
Van Cortlandt, William
Livingston, Philip
John Schuyler, Philip
P. Schuyler and Stephen
John Schuyler; third cousin once removed of Nicholas
Bayard, Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792), Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), James
Livingston, Philip
Van Cortlandt, Henry
Brockholst Livingston, Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., Edward
Livingston (1764-1836), Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler and James
Parker; fourth cousin of Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Henry
Walter Livingston, Maturin
Livingston, Rensselaer
Westerlo, Peter
Augustus Jay, Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, James
Alexander Hamilton, Philip
Schuyler, William
Jay, Charles
Ludlow Livingston, Hamilton
Fish, John
Cortlandt Parker and Philip
N. Schuyler; fourth cousin once removed of Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Gilbert
Livingston Thompson, Edward
Livingston (1796-1840), Gerrit
Smith, William
Duer, Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer, Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard, Elizabeth
Cady Stanton, John
Jay II, James
Adams Ekin, John
Jacob Astor III, Richard
Wayne Parker, Nicholas
Fish, Hamilton
Fish Jr. and Charles
Wolcott Parker. |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Schuyler
family of Albany, New York (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Meriwether Lewis Randolph (1810-1837) —
of Whelan Springs, Clark
County, Ark.
Born near Charlottesville, Albemarle
County, Va., January
31, 1810.
Secretary
of Arkansas Territory, 1835-36.
Died, of malaria,
in Whelan Springs, Clark
County, Ark., September
24, 1837 (age 27 years, 236
days).
Interment a
private or family graveyard, Clark County, Ark.
|  |
Presumably named
for: Meriwether
Lewis |
|  | Relatives: Son of Thomas
Mann Randolph Jr. and Martha
Jefferson Randolph; brother of Benjamin
Franklin Randolph and George
Wythe Randolph; married to Elizabeth Anderson Martin (who later
married Andrew
Jackson Donelson); uncle of Thomas
Jefferson Coolidge; grandson of Thomas
Jefferson; granduncle of John
Gardner Coolidge; great-grandson of Archibald
Cary; second great-grandson of Richard
Randolph; first cousin of Francis
Wayles Eppes; first cousin once removed of Dabney
Carr, John
Wayles Eppes and Frederick
Madison Roberts; first cousin twice removed of John
Randolph of Roanoke; first cousin thrice removed of Richard
Bland and Peyton
Randolph (1721-1775); second cousin of Dabney
Smith Carr; second cousin once removed of John
Marshall, James
Markham Marshall and Alexander
Keith Marshall; second cousin twice removed of Theodorick
Bland, Edmund
Jenings Randolph, Beverley
Randolph and Edith
Wilson; third cousin of Thomas
Marshall, John
Jordan Crittenden, Thomas
Turpin Crittenden, Robert
Crittenden, James
Keith Marshall, Carter
Henry Harrison and John
Breckinridge Castleman; third cousin once removed of Henry
Lee, Charles
Lee, Richard
Bland Lee, Edmund
Jennings Lee, Peyton
Randolph (1779-1828), Henry
St. George Tucker, John
Robertson, Benjamin
William Sheridan Cabell, Alexander
Parker Crittenden, Thomas
Leonidas Crittenden, Thomas
Theodore Crittenden, Archelaus
Marius Woodson, John
Augustine Marshall and Carter
Henry Harrison II; third cousin twice removed of Thomas
Theodore Crittenden Jr., William
Marshall Bullitt and Alexander
Scott Bullitt; fourth cousin of Nathaniel
Beverly Tucker, Edmund
Randolph, William
Lewis Cabell and George
Craighead Cabell; fourth cousin once removed of Thomas
Jones Hardeman, Bailey
Hardeman, Fitzhugh
Lee, William
Henry Fitzhugh Lee, Joel
Walker Flood, Edmund
Randolph Cocke, Benjamin
Earl Cabell and William
Henry Robertson. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
James Thomas Harrison (1811-1879) —
of Mississippi.
Born near Pendleton, Anderson
County, S.C., November
30, 1811.
Delegate
from Mississippi to the Confederate Provisional Congress, 1861-62.
Died in Columbus, Lowndes
County, Miss., May 22,
1879 (age 67 years, 173
days).
Interment at Friendship
Cemetery, Columbus, Miss.
|
|
Humphrey Marshall (1812-1872) —
of Kentucky.
Born in Frankfort, Franklin
County, Ky., January
13, 1812.
Lawyer;
colonel in the U.S. Army during the Mexican War; U.S.
Representative from Kentucky 7th District, 1849-52, 1855-59;
resigned 1852; U.S. Diplomatic Commissioner to China, 1852-54; general in the Confederate Army during the
Civil War; Representative
from Kentucky in the Confederate Congress, 1864-65.
Slaveowner.
Died in Louisville, Jefferson
County, Ky., March
28, 1872 (age 60 years, 75
days).
Interment at Frankfort
Cemetery, Frankfort, Ky.
|
|
Henry Brockholst Ledyard (1812-1880) —
also known as Henry Ledyard —
of Detroit, Wayne
County, Mich.; Newport, Newport
County, R.I.
Born in New York, New York
County, N.Y., March 5,
1812.
Democrat. Mayor
of Detroit, Mich., 1855-56; member of Michigan
state senate, 1857; Assistant U.S. Secretary of State, 1857.
Died in London, England,
June
7, 1880 (age 68 years, 94
days).
Interment at Island
Cemetery, Newport, R.I.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Benjamin Ledyard and Susan French (Livingston) Ledyard; married 1839 to
Matilda Frances Cass (daughter of Lewis
Cass); grandson of Henry
Brockholst Livingston; great-grandson of William
Livingston; great-grandnephew of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston and Philip
Livingston; second great-grandnephew of John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775) and Gilbert
Livingston; third great-grandson of Robert
Livingston the Elder, Anthony
Brockholls, Pieter
Van Brugh and Phillip
French; third great-grandnephew of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724), Johannes
Cuyler and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); first cousin once removed of Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843), William
Jay and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870); first cousin twice removed of Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, Matthew
Clarkson and Brockholst
Livingston; first cousin thrice removed of Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston and Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775); first cousin four times removed of Robert
Livingston the Younger, Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746), Cornelis
Cuyler and John
Cruger Jr.; first cousin five times removed of David
Davidse Schuyler and Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler; second cousin of John
Jay II; second cousin once removed of Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Henry
Walter Livingston, Rensselaer
Westerlo, Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873); second cousin twice removed of Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), Philip
Van Cortlandt, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., Edward
Livingston (1764-1836) and Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933); second cousin thrice removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Pierre
Van Cortlandt, James
Jay, Philip
John Schuyler, Philip
P. Schuyler, Stephen
John Schuyler, Henry
Cruger, John
Jay and Frederick
Jay; third cousin of Philip
Schuyler, Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Edward
Livingston (1796-1840), William
Duer, Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer and Denning
Duer; third cousin once removed of Hamilton
Fish, Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer, Nicholas
Fish, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936), John
Kean and Hamilton
Fish Kean; 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, Herbert
Livingston Satterlee, Robert
Reginald Livingston, Bronson
Murray Cutting, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991) and Robert
Winthrop Kean; third cousin thrice removed of John
Eliot Thayer Jr., Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996) and Thomas
Howard Kean; fourth cousin of Gilbert
Livingston Thompson 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, William
Waldorf Astor and Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also Wikipedia
article — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Nathan Belcher (1813-1891) —
of New London, New London
County, Conn.
Born in Griswold, New London
County, Conn., June 23,
1813.
Democrat. Lawyer; manufacturer;
member of Connecticut
state house of representatives from New London, 1846-47; member
of Connecticut
state senate 7th District, 1850; U.S.
Representative from Connecticut 3rd District, 1853-55.
Died in New London, New London
County, Conn., June 2,
1891 (age 77 years, 344
days).
Interment at Cedar
Grove Cemetery, New London, Conn.
|
|
Peter Myndert Dox (1813-1891) —
also known as Peter M. Dox —
of Geneva, Ontario
County, N.Y.; Huntsville, Madison
County, Ala.
Born in Geneva, Ontario
County, N.Y., September
11, 1813.
Democrat. Lawyer;
member of New York
state assembly from Ontario County, 1842; county judge in New
York, 1855-56; delegate
to Alabama state constitutional convention, 1865; U.S.
Representative from Alabama 5th District, 1869-73; delegate to
Democratic National Convention from Alabama, 1872.
Died in Huntsville, Madison
County, Ala., April 2,
1891 (age 77 years, 203
days).
Interment at Maple
Hill Cemetery, Huntsville, Ala.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Abraham Dox and Anne Cary (Nicholas) Dox; married, October
12, 1854, to Matilda Walker Pope; grandson of John
Nicholas; grandnephew of George
Nicholas and Wilson
Cary Nicholas; great-grandson of Robert
Carter Nicholas (1729-1780); first cousin once removed of Peyton
Randolph and Robert
Carter Nicholas (1787-1857); first cousin thrice removed of Benjamin
Harrison (1726-1791) and William
Fitzhugh; second cousin of Edmund
Randolph; second cousin once removed of Edmund
Randolph Cocke and Harry
Bartow Hawes; second cousin twice removed of Carter
Bassett Harrison, William
Henry Harrison and Francis
Beverley Biddle; third cousin of Thomas
Marshall and James
Keith Marshall; third cousin once removed of John
Scott Harrison (1804-1878); third cousin twice removed of Burwell
Bassett; fourth cousin of Carter
Henry Harrison, Benjamin
Harrison (1833-1901), William
Henry Fitzhugh Lee, John
Breckinridge Castleman and John
Scott Harrison (1844-1926); fourth cousin once removed of Connally
Findlay Trigg, Russell
Benjamin Harrison, Carter
Henry Harrison II, Richard
Evelyn Byrd and William
Welby Beverley. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Wikipedia article — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Charles Anderson (1814-1895) —
of Montgomery
County, Ohio.
Born in Louisville, Jefferson
County, Ky., June 1,
1814.
Republican. Lawyer;
member of Ohio
state senate, 1844; colonel in the Union Army during the Civil
War; Lieutenant
Governor of Ohio, 1864-65; Governor of
Ohio, 1865-66.
Died in Kuttawa, Lyon
County, Ky., September
2, 1895 (age 81 years, 93
days).
Interment at Kuttawa
Cemetery, Kuttawa, Ky.
|
 |
Elizabeth Cady Stanton (1815-1902) —
also known as Elizabeth Smith Cady —
of Seneca Falls, Seneca
County, N.Y.; Manhattan, New York
County, N.Y.
Born in Johnstown, Fulton
County, N.Y., November
12, 1815.
Candidate for U.S.
Representative from New York, 1868.
Female.
Member, American
Anti-Slavery Society.
Inducted, National
Women's Hall of Fame, 1973.
Died, of heart
failure, in Manhattan, New York
County, N.Y., October
26, 1902 (age 86 years, 348
days).
Interment at Woodlawn
Cemetery, Bronx, N.Y.
|  |
Relatives:
Daughter of Daniel
Cady and Margaret (Livingston) Cady; married, May 1,
1840, to Henry
Brewster Stanton; granddaughter of James
Livingston; second great-granddaughter of Robert
Livingston the Younger and Dirck
Ten Broeck; third great-granddaughter of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724); third great-grandniece of Robert
Livingston the Elder and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); fourth great-granddaughter of Dirck
Wesselse Ten Broeck; first cousin of Gerrit
Smith; first cousin twice removed of Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer and Robert
Van Rensselaer; first cousin thrice removed of Philip
P. Schuyler; first cousin four times removed of John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775), Gilbert
Livingston, Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746) and Cornelis
Cuyler; first cousin five times removed of David
Davidse Schuyler and Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler; second cousin once removed of Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), Edward
Livingston (1764-1836), Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler, Maturin
Livingston, Rensselaer
Westerlo and Edward
Philip Livingston; second cousin twice removed of Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792) and Peter
Samuel Schuyler; second cousin thrice removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Philip
Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775), Pierre
Van Cortlandt, William
Livingston, Philip
John Schuyler, Matthew
Clarkson (1733-1800) and Stephen
John Schuyler; third cousin of Philip
Schuyler, James
Alexander Hamilton, Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Edward
Livingston (1796-1840) and Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer; third cousin once removed of Henry
Walter Livingston, Peter
Gansevoort, John
Jacob Astor III, Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer and Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer; third cousin twice removed of Nicholas
Bayard, Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, Philip
Van Cortlandt, Henry
Brockholst Livingston, Matthew
Clarkson (1758-1825), Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., James
Parker, William
Waldorf Astor, Robert
Ray Hamilton, Peter
Goelet Gerry, Ogden
Livingston Mills and Robert
Reginald Livingston; third cousin thrice removed of William
Astor Chanler, Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler, Helen
Roosevelt Robinson and John
Eliot Thayer Jr.; fourth cousin once removed of Jeremiah
Mason, Peter
Augustus Jay, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, William
Jay, Charles
Ludlow Livingston, Hamilton
Fish, George
Washington Schuyler, John
Cortlandt Parker and Philip
N. Schuyler. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also Wikipedia
article — NNDB
dossier — Find-A-Grave
memorial — National
Women's Hall of Fame |
|  | Books about Elizabeth Cady Stanton:
Lori D. Ginzberg, Elizabeth
Cady Stanton: An American Life |
|  | Image source: American Monthly Review
of Reviews, December 1902 |
|
|
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 and Mildred (Strother) Buckner; married, September
16, 1841, to Eliza L. Clark; 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 Jr.; 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: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Pendleton
#3 family of Virginia (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Alvin Saunders (1817-1899) —
of Mt. Pleasant, Henry
County, Iowa.
Born in Flemingsburg, Fleming
County, Ky., July 12,
1817.
Republican. Delegate
to Iowa state constitutional convention from Henry County, 1846;
member of Iowa
state senate, 1854-56, 1858-60; delegate to Republican National
Convention from Iowa, 1860;
Governor
of Nebraska Territory, 1861-67; delegate to Republican National
Convention from Nebraska, 1868;
U.S.
Senator from Nebraska, 1877-83.
Disciples
of Christ.
Died in Omaha, Douglas
County, Neb., November
1, 1899 (age 82 years, 112
days).
Interment at Forest
Lawn Memorial Park, Omaha, Neb.
|
|
James M. Birney (1817-1888) —
also known as James Birney —
of Bay City, Bay
County, Mich.
Born in Danville, Boyle
County, Ky., June 17,
1817.
Republican. Circuit
judge in Michigan 10th Circuit, 1860-63; Lieutenant
Governor of Michigan, 1861; delegate to Republican National
Convention from Michigan, 1872;
U.S. Minister to Netherlands, 1876-82.
Died in Bay City, Bay
County, Mich., May 8,
1888 (age 70 years, 326
days).
Interment at Pine
Ridge Cemetery, Bay City, Mich.
|
|
John Jay II (1817-1894) —
Born in New York, New York
County, N.Y., June 23,
1817.
Lawyer;
U.S. Minister to Austria, 1869-75; historian.
Member, American
Historical Association.
Died in New York, New York
County, N.Y., May 5,
1894 (age 76 years, 316
days).
Interment at Jay
Family Cemetery, Rye, N.Y.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of William
Jay and Hannah Augusta (McVicker) Jay; married to Eleanor
Kingsland Field; nephew of Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843); grandson of John
Jay; grandnephew of James
Jay, Frederick
Jay and Henry
Brockholst Livingston; great-grandson of William
Livingston; great-grandnephew of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston and Philip
Livingston; second great-grandson of Jacobus
Van Cortlandt; second great-grandnephew of Stephanus
Van Cortlandt, John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775) and Gilbert
Livingston; third great-grandson of Robert
Livingston the Elder, Anthony
Brockholls, Pieter
Van Brugh and Phillip
French; third great-grandnephew of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724), Johannes
Cuyler and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); first cousin twice removed of Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, Matthew
Clarkson and Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933); first cousin thrice removed of Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston and Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775); first cousin four times removed of Robert
Livingston the Younger, Cornelis
Cuyler, Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746) and John
Cruger Jr.; first cousin five times removed of David
Davidse Schuyler and Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler; second cousin of Henry
Brockholst Ledyard; second cousin once removed of Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Henry
Walter Livingston, Rensselaer
Westerlo, Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873) and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870); second cousin twice removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Pierre
Van Cortlandt, Philip
John Schuyler, Stephen
John Schuyler, Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), Philip
Van Cortlandt, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., Edward
Livingston (1764-1836) and Brockholst
Livingston; second cousin thrice removed of Philip
P. Schuyler and Henry
Cruger; third cousin of Philip
Schuyler, Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Edward
Livingston (1796-1840), William
Duer, Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer and Denning
Duer; third cousin once removed of Volkert
Petrus Douw, Nicholas
Bayard, Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Hendrick
Kiliaen Van Rensselaer, Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792), Killian
Killian Van Rensselaer, Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler, James
Parker, Hamilton
Fish, Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer, Nicholas
Fish, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936), John
Kean and Hamilton
Fish Kean; third cousin twice removed of James
Livingston, Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Herbert
Livingston Satterlee, Bronson
Murray Cutting, Robert
Reginald Livingston, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991) and Robert
Winthrop Kean; third cousin thrice removed of John
Eliot Thayer Jr., Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996) and Thomas
Howard Kean; fourth cousin of Leonard
Gansevoort, Leonard
Gansevoort Jr., Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, James
Alexander Hamilton, Gilbert
Livingston Thompson, John
Cortlandt Parker and John
Jacob Astor III; fourth cousin once removed of Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Maturin
Livingston, Peter
Gansevoort, George
Washington Schuyler, James
Adams Ekin, Philip
N. Schuyler, Richard
Wayne Parker, William
Waldorf Astor, Charles
Wolcott Parker and Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also U.S. State Dept career summary — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
George Wythe Randolph (1818-1867) —
also known as George W. Randolph —
of Richmond,
Va.
Born near Charlottesville, Albemarle
County, Va., March
10, 1818.
Lawyer;
delegate
to Virginia secession convention from Richmond city, 1861;
general in the Confederate Army during the Civil War; Confederate
Secretary of War, 1862; after the collapse of the Confederacy,
fled
to Europe to avoid
capture; pardoned
in 1866.
Episcopalian.
Died of pulmonary
pneumonia, near Charlottesville, Albemarle
County, Va., April 3,
1867 (age 49 years, 24
days).
Interment at Monticello
Graveyard, Near Charlottesville, Albemarle County, Va.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Thomas
Mann Randolph Jr. and Martha
Jefferson Randolph; brother of Benjamin
Franklin Randolph, Meriwether
Lewis Randolph and Virginia Jefferson Randolph (who married Nicholas
Philip Trist); uncle of Thomas
Jefferson Coolidge; grandson of Thomas
Jefferson; granduncle of John
Gardner Coolidge; great-grandson of Archibald
Cary; second great-grandson of Richard
Randolph; first cousin of Francis
Wayles Eppes; first cousin once removed of Dabney
Carr, John
Wayles Eppes and Frederick
Madison Roberts; first cousin twice removed of John
Randolph of Roanoke; first cousin thrice removed of Richard
Bland and Peyton
Randolph (1721-1775); second cousin of Dabney
Smith Carr; second cousin once removed of John
Marshall, James
Markham Marshall and Alexander
Keith Marshall; second cousin twice removed of Theodorick
Bland, Edmund
Jenings Randolph, Beverley
Randolph and Edith
Wilson; third cousin of Thomas
Marshall, John
Jordan Crittenden, Thomas
Turpin Crittenden, Robert
Crittenden, James
Keith Marshall, Carter
Henry Harrison and John
Breckinridge Castleman; third cousin once removed of Henry
Lee, Charles
Lee, Richard
Bland Lee, Edmund
Jennings Lee, Peyton
Randolph (1779-1828), Henry
St. George Tucker, John
Robertson, Benjamin
William Sheridan Cabell, Alexander
Parker Crittenden, Thomas
Leonidas Crittenden, Thomas
Theodore Crittenden, Archelaus
Marius Woodson, John
Augustine Marshall and Carter
Henry Harrison II; third cousin twice removed of Thomas
Theodore Crittenden Jr., William
Marshall Bullitt and Alexander
Scott Bullitt; fourth cousin of Edmund
Randolph, Nathaniel
Beverly Tucker, William
Lewis Cabell and George
Craighead Cabell; fourth cousin once removed of Thomas
Jones Hardeman, Bailey
Hardeman, Fitzhugh
Lee, William
Henry Fitzhugh Lee, Joel
Walker Flood, Edmund
Randolph Cocke, Benjamin
Earl Cabell and William
Henry Robertson. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | Coins and currency: His portrait
appeared on Confederate States $100 notes in 1862-64.
|
|
|
Philip N. Schuyler (1819-1907) —
of Akron, Summit
County, Ohio; Norwalk, Huron
County, Ohio; Bellevue, Huron
County, Ohio.
Born in New Jersey, September
6, 1819.
Republican. Mayor of
Akron, Ohio, 1853; delegate to Republican National Convention
from Ohio, 1860.
Died in Bellevue, Huron
County, Ohio, May 12,
1907 (age 87 years, 248
days).
Interment at Woodlawn
Cemetery, Norwalk, Ohio.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Garret Schuyler and Mary (Heacock) Schuyler; married to Elizabeth
Thatcher; second great-grandnephew of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724) and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); first cousin thrice removed of John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775), Gilbert
Livingston and Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746); first cousin four times removed of David
Davidse Schuyler and Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler; second cousin twice removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Philip
Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775), Pierre
Van Cortlandt, William
Livingston, Philip
John Schuyler, Philip
P. Schuyler and Stephen
John Schuyler; second cousin thrice removed of Montgomery
Schuyler Jr.; third cousin once removed of Nicholas
Bayard, Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792), Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), James
Livingston, Philip
Van Cortlandt, Henry
Brockholst Livingston, Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., Edward
Livingston (1764-1836), Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler and James
Parker; fourth cousin of Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Henry
Walter Livingston, Maturin
Livingston, Rensselaer
Westerlo, Peter
Augustus Jay, Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, Philip
Schuyler, James
Alexander Hamilton, William
Jay, Charles
Ludlow Livingston, Hamilton
Fish, George
Washington Schuyler and John
Cortlandt Parker; fourth cousin once removed of Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Gilbert
Livingston Thompson, Edward
Livingston (1796-1840), Gerrit
Smith, William
Duer, Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer, Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard, Elizabeth
Cady Stanton, John
Jay II, James
Adams Ekin, John
Jacob Astor III, Eugene
Schuyler, Richard
Wayne Parker, Nicholas
Fish, Hamilton
Fish Jr. and Charles
Wolcott Parker. |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Schuyler
family of Albany, New York (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Edmund Randolph (1820-1861) —
of California.
Born in Virginia, June 9,
1820.
Went
to California for the 1849 Gold Rush; member of California
state assembly from San Francisco District, 1849-51.
Died in San
Francisco, Calif., September
8, 1861 (age 41 years, 91
days).
Original interment at Laurel
Hill Cemetery (which no longer exists), San Francisco, Calif.;
reinterment at Cypress
Lawn Memorial Park, Colma, Calif.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Peyton
Randolph (1779-1828) and Maria (Ward) Randolph; grandson of Edmund
Jenings Randolph; grandnephew of George
Nicholas, Wilson
Cary Nicholas and John
Nicholas; great-grandson of Robert
Carter Nicholas (1729-1780); great-grandnephew of Peyton
Randolph (1721-1775); second great-grandnephew of Richard
Randolph; first cousin once removed of Robert
Carter Nicholas (1787-1857) and Edmund
Randolph Cocke; first cousin twice removed of Francis
Beverley Biddle; first cousin thrice removed of Richard
Bland, Benjamin
Harrison (1726-1791) and William
Fitzhugh; second cousin of Peter
Myndert Dox; second cousin once removed of Harry
Bartow Hawes; second cousin twice removed of Theodorick
Bland, Thomas
Jefferson, Beverley
Randolph, Carter
Bassett Harrison, William
Henry Harrison and John
Randolph of Roanoke; third cousin of Thomas
Marshall and James
Keith Marshall; third cousin once removed of John
Marshall, Henry
Lee, Charles
Lee, Richard
Bland Lee, James
Markham Marshall, Thomas
Mann Randolph Jr., Alexander
Keith Marshall, Edmund
Jennings Lee, Martha
Jefferson Randolph, Dabney
Carr, Henry
St. George Tucker and John
Scott Harrison (1804-1878); third cousin twice removed of Burwell
Bassett; fourth cousin of Francis
Wayles Eppes, Dabney
Smith Carr, Benjamin
Franklin Randolph, Meriwether
Lewis Randolph, George
Wythe Randolph, Nathaniel
Beverly Tucker, Carter
Henry Harrison, Benjamin
Harrison (1833-1901), William
Henry Fitzhugh Lee, John
Breckinridge Castleman and John
Scott Harrison (1844-1926); fourth cousin once removed of John
Wayles Eppes, Thomas
Jefferson Coolidge, Fitzhugh
Lee, Connally
Findlay Trigg, Russell
Benjamin Harrison, John
Augustine Marshall, Richard
Evelyn Byrd, Carter
Henry Harrison II, Frederick
Madison Roberts and William
Welby Beverley. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Nathaniel Beverly Tucker (1820-1890) —
also known as Beverly Tucker —
of Virginia.
Born in Winchester,
Va., June 8,
1820.
Newspaper
editor; U.S. Consul in Liverpool, 1857-61.
Died in Richmond,
Va., July 5,
1890 (age 70 years, 27
days).
Interment somewhere
in Richmond, Va.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Henry
St. George Tucker and Ann Evelina (Hunter) Tucker; married to
Jane Shelton Ellis; nephew of John
Randolph of Roanoke; grandson of St.
George Tucker; grandnephew of Theodorick
Bland (1742-1790) and Thomas
Tudor Tucker; great-grandnephew of Richard
Bland; second great-grandnephew of Richard
Randolph; first cousin once removed of George
Tucker; first cousin thrice removed of Peyton
Randolph (1721-1775); second cousin once removed of Henry
Lee, Charles
Lee, Richard
Bland Lee and Edmund
Jennings Lee; second cousin twice removed of Thomas
Jefferson, Edmund
Jenings Randolph and Beverley
Randolph; third cousin once removed of John
Marshall, James
Markham Marshall, Thomas
Mann Randolph Jr., Alexander
Keith Marshall, Martha
Jefferson Randolph, Dabney
Carr, John
Wayles Eppes, Theodorick
Bland (1776-1846), Peyton
Randolph (1779-1828), Fitzhugh
Lee and William
Henry Fitzhugh Lee; third cousin twice removed of David
Meriwether (1755-1822), James
Meriwether (1755-1817) and Meriwether
Lewis; third cousin thrice removed of William
Welby Beverley; fourth cousin of Thomas
Marshall, John
Robertson, Benjamin
William Sheridan Cabell, James
Keith Marshall, Francis
Wayles Eppes, Dabney
Smith Carr, Benjamin
Franklin Randolph, Meriwether
Lewis Randolph, George
Wythe Randolph, Edmund
Randolph, Carter
Henry Harrison and John
Breckinridge Castleman; fourth cousin once removed of James
Meriwether (1788-1852), David
Meriwether (1800-1893), James
Archibald Meriwether, William
Lewis Cabell, Thomas
Jefferson Coolidge, George
Craighead Cabell, Edmund
Randolph Cocke, John
Augustine Marshall, Carter
Henry Harrison II, Frederick
Madison Roberts and Douglass
Townshend Bolling. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|
|
Edward Colston Marshall (1821-1893) —
Born in Woodford
County, Ky., June 29,
1821.
Democrat. Served in the U.S. Army during the Mexican War; U.S.
Representative from California 1st District, 1851-53; candidate
for U.S.
Senator from California, 1856; candidate for U.S.
Representative from Kentucky 7th District, 1874; California
state attorney general, 1883-87.
Died in San
Francisco, Calif., July 9,
1893 (age 72 years, 10
days).
Interment at Mountain
View Cemetery, Oakland, Calif.
|
|
John Jacob Astor III (1822-1890) —
Born in New York, New York
County, N.Y., June 10,
1822.
Republican. General in the Union Army during the Civil War;
Republican Presidential Elector for New York, 1880
(voted for James
A. Garfield and Chester
A. Arthur).
Died in New York, New York
County, N.Y., February
22, 1890 (age 67 years, 257
days).
Interment at Trinity
Cemetery, Manhattan, N.Y.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of William Backhouse Astor and Margaret Alida Rebecca (Armstrong)
Astor; married to Charlotte Augusta Gibbes; father of William
Waldorf Astor; grandson of John
Armstrong Jr. and John Jacob Astor; grandnephew of Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), James
Armstrong and Edward
Livingston (1764-1836); granduncle of William
Astor Chanler, Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler and Helen
Roosevelt Robinson; great-grandson of John
Armstrong and Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775); second great-grandson of Robert
Livingston (1688-1775); second great-grandnephew of John
Livingston and Gilbert
Livingston; third great-grandson of Robert
Livingston the Elder and Robert
Livingston the Younger; third great-grandnephew of Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); fourth great-grandson of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724); first cousin thrice removed of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Philip
Livingston, William
Livingston, Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer and James
Livingston; first cousin four times removed of Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746) and Philip
P. Schuyler; first cousin five times removed of David
Davidse Schuyler and Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler; second cousin twice removed of Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, Philip
Van Cortlandt, Henry
Brockholst Livingston, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler, Maturin
Livingston, Peter
Goelet Gerry, Ogden
Livingston Mills and Robert
Reginald Livingston; second cousin thrice removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Pierre
Van Cortlandt, Philip
John Schuyler, Stephen
John Schuyler, Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792) and Peter
Samuel Schuyler; second cousin four times removed of Matthew
Clarkson (1733-1800); 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, Philip
Schuyler, James
Alexander Hamilton, Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), William
Jay, Gerrit
Smith, Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873), Hamilton
Fish and Elizabeth
Cady Stanton; third cousin twice removed of Nicholas
Bayard and James
Parker; third cousin thrice removed of Matthew
Clarkson (1758-1825); fourth cousin of Gilbert
Livingston Thompson, Edward
Livingston (1796-1840), William
Duer, Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer, Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard, John
Jay II, Nicholas
Fish, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936) and Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer; fourth cousin once removed of George
Washington Schuyler, John
Cortlandt Parker, Philip
N. Schuyler, Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Ray Hamilton, John
Kean, Hamilton
Fish Kean, Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright, Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870) and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991). |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Roosevelt
family of New York City, New York; Chanler-Astor-Ward
family of New York City, New York (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also Wikipedia
article — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
John Randolph Tucker (1823-1897) —
of Lexington,
Va.
Born in Winchester,
Va., December
24, 1823.
Democrat. U.S.
Representative from Virginia, 1875-87 (6th District 1875-85, 10th
District 1885-87).
Slaveowner.
Died in Lexington,
Va., February
13, 1897 (age 73 years, 51
days).
Interment at Mt.
Hebron Cemetery, Winchester, Va.
|
|
Carter Henry Harrison (1825-1893) —
of Chicago, Cook
County, Ill.
Born near Lexington, Fayette
County, Ky., February
15, 1825.
Democrat. U.S.
Representative from Illinois 2nd District, 1875-79; mayor
of Chicago, Ill., 1879-87, 1893; died in office 1893; delegate to
Democratic National Convention from Illinois, 1880,
1884;
candidate for Governor of
Illinois, 1884.
Slaveowner.
Shot
and killed at
his home, by Patrick Eugene Prendergast, in Chicago, Cook
County, Ill., October
28, 1893 (age 68 years, 255
days). Prendergast, who was defended by famed trial lawyer Clarence
Darrow, was tried for murder, convicted, sentenced to death, and
hanged.
Interment at Graceland
Cemetery, Chicago, Ill.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Carter Henry Harrison (1796-1825) and Caroline Evaline (Russell)
Harrison; married to Sophonisba Grayson Preston (great-grandniece of
William
Smallwood); father of Carter
Henry Harrison II; grandson of William
Russell (1758-1825); great-grandson of William
Russell (1735-1793); great-grandnephew of Benjamin
Harrison (1726-1791) and William
Cabell; second great-grandnephew of Richard
Randolph; first cousin of John
Breckinridge Castleman; first cousin once removed of Joseph
Cabell Breckinridge (1788-1823), Benjamin
William Sheridan Cabell and Robert
Jefferson Breckinridge; first cousin twice removed of Thomas
Jefferson, Carter
Bassett Harrison, William
Cabell Jr., William
Henry Cabell and William
Henry Harrison (1773-1841); first cousin thrice removed of Richard
Bland, Peyton
Randolph (1721-1775), Robert
Carter Nicholas (1729-1780) and William
Fitzhugh; second cousin of John
Cabell Breckinridge, Peter
Augustus Porter (1827-1864), William
Lewis Cabell, Robert
Jefferson Breckinridge Jr., George
Craighead Cabell and William
Campbell Preston Breckinridge; second cousin once removed of Martha
Jefferson Randolph, Dabney
Carr, Frederick
Mortimer Cabell, John
Scott Harrison (1804-1878), Edward
Carrington Cabell, Joseph
Cabell Breckinridge (1844-1906), Clifton
Rodes Breckinridge, Peter
Augustus Porter (1853-1925), Benjamin
Earl Cabell, Levin
Irving Handy, Desha
Breckinridge and Henry
Skillman Breckinridge; second cousin twice removed of Theodorick
Bland, Edmund
Jenings Randolph, George
Nicholas, Beverley
Randolph, Wilson
Cary Nicholas, John
Nicholas, John
Randolph of Roanoke and Earle
Cabell; third cousin of Francis
Wayles Eppes, Dabney
Smith Carr, Benjamin
Franklin Randolph, Meriwether
Lewis Randolph, George
Wythe Randolph, John
William Leftwich, Benjamin
Harrison (1833-1901) and John
Scott Harrison (1844-1926); third cousin once removed of John
Marshall, Henry
Lee, Charles
Lee, Richard
Bland Lee, James
Markham Marshall, Thomas
Mann Randolph Jr., Alexander
Keith Marshall, Edmund
Jennings Lee, Peyton
Randolph (1779-1828), Henry
St. George Tucker, Robert
Carter Nicholas (1787-1857), Stanley
Matthews, Thomas
Jefferson Coolidge, Russell
Benjamin Harrison and Frederick
Madison Roberts; third cousin twice removed of Burwell
Bassett, John
Gardner Coolidge, Edith
Wilson and William
Henry Harrison (1896-1990); third cousin thrice removed of Charles
Carroll of Carrollton; fourth cousin of Thomas
Marshall, James
Keith Marshall, Peter
Myndert Dox, Edmund
Randolph, Nathaniel
Beverly Tucker and William
Henry Fitzhugh Lee; fourth cousin once removed of John
Wayles Eppes, Fitzhugh
Lee, Edmund
Randolph Cocke, Connally
Findlay Trigg, John
Augustine Marshall, Richard
Evelyn Byrd, Harry
Bartow Hawes, William
Welby Beverley and James
Harlan Cleveland Jr.. |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Breckinridge-Preston-Harrison-Richardson
family of Virginia; Cabell-Breckinridge
family of Virginia (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | Cross-reference: Robert
E. Burke |
|  | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Wikipedia article |
|
|
John Winthrop Chanler (1826-1877) —
also known as John W. Chanler —
of New York, New York
County, N.Y.
Born in New York, New York
County, N.Y., September
14, 1826.
Democrat. Lawyer;
member of New York
state assembly from New York County 10th District, 1858-59; U.S.
Representative from New York 7th District, 1863-69.
On May 14, 1866, he offered a resolution defending President Andrew
Johnson's veto of Reconstruction
enactments, which he called "the wicked and revolutionary acts of a
few malignant and mischievous men." On motion of Rep. Robert
C. Schenck, he was censured
for insulting
the House of Representatives.
Died in Barrytown, Dutchess
County, N.Y., October
19, 1877 (age 51 years, 35
days).
Interment at Trinity
Cemetery, Manhattan, N.Y.
|
 |
Thomas Francis Bayard Sr. (1828-1898) —
also known as Thomas F. Bayard, Sr. —
of Wilmington, New Castle
County, Del.
Born in Wilmington, New Castle
County, Del., October
29, 1828.
Democrat. Lawyer; U.S.
Attorney for Delaware, 1853-55; U.S.
Senator from Delaware, 1869-85; candidate for Democratic
nomination for President, 1880,
1884;
U.S.
Secretary of State, 1885-89; delegate to Democratic National
Convention from Delaware, 1892
(member, Resolutions
Committee); U.S. Ambassador to Great Britain, 1893-97.
Died in Dedham, Norfolk
County, Mass., September
28, 1898 (age 69 years, 334
days).
Interment at Old
Swedes Church Cemetery, Wilmington, Del.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of James
Asheton Bayard Jr. and Anne (Francis) Bayard; married 1856 to Louisa
Lee; married, November
7, 1889, to Mary W. Clymer; father of Thomas
Francis Bayard Jr.; nephew of Richard
Henry Bayard (1796-1868); grandson of James
Asheton Bayard Sr.; grandfather of Mabel Bayard Warren (who
married Joseph
Gardner Bradley), Thomas
Francis Bayard III and Alexis
Irenee du Pont Bayard; great-grandson of Richard
Bassett; great-grandfather of Richard
Henry Bayard (born c.1949); great-grandnephew of John
Bubenheim Bayard; fourth great-grandnephew of Nicholas
Bayard (c.1644-1707); fifth great-grandnephew of Pieter
Stuyvesant; second cousin once removed of Thomas
Clayton and Littleton
Kirkpatrick; second cousin four times removed of Stephanus
Bayard; third cousin of Andrew
Kirkpatrick; third cousin thrice removed of Nicholas
Bayard (1736-1802); fourth cousin of John
Sluyter Wirt. |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Seymour
family of New York and Connecticut; DuPont-Bayard
family of Wilmington, Delaware (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | Mount
Bayard, on the border between British
Columbia, Canada, and the Prince of
Wales-Hyder Census Area, Alaska, is named for
him. |
|  | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Wikipedia article — U.S. State Dept career summary — NNDB
dossier |
|  | Image source: James G. Blaine, Twenty
Years of Congress, vol. 2 (1886) |
|
|
Thomas Jefferson Coolidge (1831-1920) —
also known as T. Jefferson Coolidge —
Born in Boston, Suffolk
County, Mass., August
26, 1831.
Republican. Manufacturer;
cotton mill
business; president of the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad,
and other companies; U.S. Minister to France, 1892-93.
Died in Boston, Suffolk
County, Mass., November
17, 1920 (age 89 years, 83
days).
Cremated;
ashes interred at Mt.
Auburn Cemetery, Cambridge, Mass.
|  |
Presumably named
for: Thomas
Jefferson |
|  | Relatives: Son of Ellen Wayles
(Randolph) Coolidge and Joseph Coolidge; married, November
4, 1852, to Mehitable Sullivan 'Hetty' Appleton (daughter of William
Appleton); nephew of Benjamin
Franklin Randolph, Meriwether
Lewis Randolph and George
Wythe Randolph; uncle of John
Gardner Coolidge; grandson of Thomas
Mann Randolph Jr. and Martha
Jefferson Randolph; great-grandson of Thomas
Jefferson; second great-grandson of Archibald
Cary; third great-grandson of Richard
Randolph; first cousin once removed of Francis
Wayles Eppes; first cousin twice removed of Dabney
Carr and John
Wayles Eppes; first cousin thrice removed of John
Randolph of Roanoke; first cousin four times removed of Richard
Bland and Peyton
Randolph (1721-1775); second cousin of Frederick
Madison Roberts; second cousin once removed of Dabney
Smith Carr; second cousin twice removed of John
Marshall, James
Markham Marshall and Alexander
Keith Marshall; second cousin thrice removed of Theodorick
Bland, Edmund
Jenings Randolph and Beverley
Randolph; third cousin once removed of Thomas
Marshall, John
Jordan Crittenden, Thomas
Turpin Crittenden, Robert
Crittenden, James
Keith Marshall, Carter
Henry Harrison, John
Breckinridge Castleman and Edith
Wilson; third cousin twice removed of Henry
Lee, Charles
Lee, Richard
Bland Lee, Edmund
Jennings Lee, Peyton
Randolph (1779-1828), Henry
St. George Tucker, John
Robertson and Benjamin
William Sheridan Cabell; fourth cousin of Alexander
Parker Crittenden, Thomas
Leonidas Crittenden, Thomas
Theodore Crittenden, Archelaus
Marius Woodson, John
Augustine Marshall and Carter
Henry Harrison II; fourth cousin once removed of Edmund
Randolph, Nathaniel
Beverly Tucker, William
Lewis Cabell, George
Craighead Cabell, Thomas
Theodore Crittenden Jr., William
Marshall Bullitt and Alexander
Scott Bullitt. |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Appleton
#1 family of Boston, Massachusetts (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also U.S. State Dept career summary |
|
|
Caroline Harrison (1832-1892) —
also known as Caroline Lavinia Scott —
Born in Oxford, Butler
County, Ohio, October
1, 1832.
Music
teacher; First Lady
of the United States, 1889-92; died in office 1892.
Female.
Member, Daughters of the
American Revolution.
Died, in the White
House, Washington,
D.C., October
25, 1892 (age 60 years, 24
days).
Interment at Crown
Hill Cemetery, Indianapolis, Ind.
|
 |
Benjamin Harrison (1833-1901) —
also known as "Little Ben"; "Kid
Gloves" —
of Indianapolis, Marion
County, Ind.
Born in North Bend, Hamilton
County, Ohio, August
20, 1833.
Republican. Indiana
reporter of state courts, 1861-63, 1865-69; general in the Union
Army during the Civil War; candidate for Governor of
Indiana, 1876; delegate to Republican National Convention from
Indiana, 1880;
U.S.
Senator from Indiana, 1881-87; President
of the United States, 1889-93; defeated, 1892.
Presbyterian.
English
ancestry. Member, Loyal
Legion; Phi
Delta Theta.
Died of pneumonia,
in Indianapolis, Marion
County, Ind., March
13, 1901 (age 67 years, 205
days).
Interment at Crown
Hill Cemetery, Indianapolis, Ind.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of John
Scott Harrison (1804-1878) and Elizabeth Ramsey (Irwin) Harrison;
brother of John
Scott Harrison (1844-1926); married, October
20, 1853, to Caroline
Lavinia Scott; married, April 6,
1896, to Mary Scott (Lord) Dimmick (sister-in-law of Joseph
Benjamin Dimmick); father of Russell
Benjamin Harrison; grandson of William
Henry Harrison (1773-1841) and Anna
Harrison; grandfather of William
Henry Harrison (1896-1990); grandnephew of Carter
Bassett Harrison; great-grandson of Benjamin
Harrison (1726-1791) and John
Cleves Symmes; first cousin twice removed of Beverley
Randolph and Burwell
Bassett; first cousin thrice removed of Robert
Carter Nicholas (1729-1780) and William
Fitzhugh; second cousin twice removed of George
Nicholas, Wilson
Cary Nicholas and John
Nicholas; third cousin of Carter
Henry Harrison and John
Breckinridge Castleman; third cousin once removed of Peyton
Randolph, Robert
Carter Nicholas (1787-1857) and Carter
Henry Harrison II; fourth cousin of Thomas
Marshall, James
Keith Marshall, Peter
Myndert Dox, Edmund
Randolph and William
Henry Fitzhugh Lee; fourth cousin once removed of Edmund
Randolph Cocke, Connally
Findlay Trigg, Richard
Evelyn Byrd, Harry
Bartow Hawes and William
Welby Beverley. |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Breckinridge-Preston-Harrison-Richardson
family of Virginia (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | Cross-reference: Benjamin
Folsom |
|  | Other politicians named for him: Benjamin
H. Swig
— Ben
H. Waigand
— Ben
DeHart
|
|  | Campaign slogan: "Grandfather's hat
fits Ben." |
|  | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Wikipedia article — NNDB
dossier — Find-A-Grave
memorial — OurCampaigns
candidate detail |
|  | Books about Benjamin Harrison: Rita
Stevens, Benjamin
Harrison, 23rd President of the United States — Harry
J. Sievers, Benjamin
Harrison : Hoosier President: The White House and After,
1889-1901 — Charles W. Calhoun, Benjamin
Harrison — Homer E. Socolofsky & Allan B. Spetter, The
Presidency of Benjamin Harrison — Mike Resnick, ed.,
Alternate
Presidents [anthology] — Susan Clinton, Benjamin
Harrison : Twenty-Third President of the United States (for young
readers) |
|  | Critical books about Benjamin Harrison:
Nathan Miller, Star-Spangled
Men : America's Ten Worst Presidents |
|  | Image source: Portrait & Biographical
Album of Washtenaw County (1891) |
|
|
John J. McAfee (1836-1896) —
of Kentucky.
Born in Mercer
County, Ky., 1836.
Served in the Confederate Army during the Civil War; member of Kentucky
state house of representatives, 1871-73.
Died, of heart
trouble, Louisville, Jefferson
County, Ky., April 4,
1896 (age about 59
years).
Interment at New
Providence Presbyterian Church Cemetery, Near McAfee, Mercer
County, Ky.
|
|
Elbridge Thomas Gerry (1837-1927) —
also known as Elbridge T. Gerry; "Commodore
Gerry" —
of Newport, Newport
County, R.I.; Manhattan, New York
County, N.Y.
Born in Charlestown, Washington
County, R.I., December
25, 1837.
Lawyer;
delegate
to New York state constitutional convention, 1867; founder
and president, New York Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to
Children (said to be the "parent of all child protective
organizations in the world"); governor of New York Hospital,
1878-1912; chairman, New York State Commission on Capital Punishment
(replaced hanging with the electric chair), 1886-88; trustee, New
York Life
Insurance Co.; chairman, New York City Commission on Insanity,
1892.
Member, Sons of
the Revolution.
Broke his hip in a fall, and
died two weeks later, in Manhattan, New York
County, N.Y., February
18, 1927 (age 89 years, 55
days).
Entombed at St.
James Episcopal Churchyard, Hyde Park, N.Y.
|
|
Eugene Schuyler (1840-1890) —
of Ithaca, Tompkins
County, N.Y.
Born in Ithaca, Tompkins
County, N.Y., February
26, 1840.
U.S. Consul in Moscow, 1866-69; Reval, 1869-70; Birmingham, 1878-79; U.S. Consul General in Constantinople, 1876-78; Rome, 1879-80; Bucharest, as of 1880-82; Athens, as of 1882-84; Cairo, 1889-90; U.S. Diplomatic Agent to Romania, 1880; U.S. Charge d'Affaires to Romania, 1880-82; U.S. Minister to Romania, 1882-84; Serbia, 1882-84; Greece, 1882-84.
Died, of malarial
fever, in Venice, Italy,
July
16, 1890 (age 50 years, 140
days).
Interment at Cimitero
di San Michele, Venice, Italy; cenotaph at Ithaca
City Cemetery, Ithaca, N.Y.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Matilda (Scriber) Schuyler and George
Washington Schuyler; married, July 8,
1877, to Gertrude Wallace King; third great-grandnephew of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724) and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); first cousin once removed of Karl
Cortlandt Schuyler; first cousin four times removed of John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775), Gilbert
Livingston and Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746); first cousin five times removed of David
Davidse Schuyler and Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler; second cousin thrice removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Philip
Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775), Pierre
Van Cortlandt, William
Livingston, Philip
John Schuyler, Philip
P. Schuyler and Stephen
John Schuyler; third cousin twice removed of Nicholas
Bayard, Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792), Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), James
Livingston, Philip
Van Cortlandt, Henry
Brockholst Livingston, Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., Edward
Livingston, Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler and James
Parker; fourth cousin once removed of Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Henry
Walter Livingston, Maturin
Livingston, Rensselaer
Westerlo, Peter
Augustus Jay, Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, James
Alexander Hamilton, Philip
Schuyler, William
Jay, Charles
Ludlow Livingston, Hamilton
Fish, John
Cortlandt Parker and Philip
N. Schuyler. |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Schuyler
family of Albany, New York (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also U.S. State Dept career summary — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Edmund Randolph Cocke (1841-1922) —
also known as Edmund R. Cocke —
of Cumberland
County, Va.
Born in Cumberland
County, Va., March
25, 1841.
Served in the Confederate Army during the Civil War; Populist
candidate for Governor of
Virginia, 1893; Populist candidate for U.S.
Representative from Virginia 10th District, 1894; Populist
candidate for Lieutenant
Governor of Virginia, 1897.
Died in Cumberland
County, Va., February
19, 1922 (age 80 years, 331
days).
Interment a private or family graveyard, Cumberland County, Va.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of William Armistead Cocke and Elizabeth Randolph (Preston) Cocke;
married, October
17, 1871, to Phoebe A. Preston; married, May 6,
1878, to Lucia Cary Harrison (second cousin of Richard
Evelyn Byrd); grandnephew of Peyton
Randolph (1779-1828); great-grandson of Edmund
Jenings Randolph; great-grandnephew of George
Nicholas, Wilson
Cary Nicholas and John
Nicholas; second great-grandson of Robert
Carter Nicholas (1729-1780); second great-grandnephew of Peyton
Randolph (1721-1775); third great-grandnephew of Richard
Randolph; first cousin once removed of Edmund
Randolph; first cousin twice removed of Robert
Carter Nicholas (1787-1857); first cousin four times removed of
Richard
Bland, Benjamin
Harrison (1726-1791) and William
Fitzhugh; second cousin once removed of Peter
Myndert Dox and Francis
Beverley Biddle; second cousin thrice removed of Theodorick
Bland, Thomas
Jefferson, Beverley
Randolph, Carter
Bassett Harrison, William
Henry Harrison and John
Randolph of Roanoke; third cousin of Harry
Bartow Hawes; third cousin once removed of Thomas
Marshall and James
Keith Marshall; third cousin twice removed of John
Marshall, Henry
Lee, Charles
Lee, Richard
Bland Lee, James
Markham Marshall, Thomas
Mann Randolph Jr., Alexander
Keith Marshall, Edmund
Jennings Lee, Martha
Jefferson Randolph, Dabney
Carr, Henry
St. George Tucker and John
Scott Harrison (1804-1878); third cousin thrice removed of Burwell
Bassett; fourth cousin once removed of Francis
Wayles Eppes, Dabney
Smith Carr, Benjamin
Franklin Randolph, Meriwether
Lewis Randolph, George
Wythe Randolph, Nathaniel
Beverly Tucker, Carter
Henry Harrison, Benjamin
Harrison (1833-1901), William
Henry Fitzhugh Lee, John
Breckinridge Castleman and John
Scott Harrison (1844-1926). |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also Wikipedia
article — Find-A-Grave
memorial — OurCampaigns
candidate detail |
|
|
Henry Newton Schuyler (1843-1933) —
also known as Henry N. Schuyler —
of Pana, Christian
County, Ill.
Born in Fonda, Montgomery
County, N.Y., February
4, 1843.
Republican. Presidential Elector for Illinois, 1897;
delegate to Republican National Convention from Illinois, 1904.
Died in Pana, Christian
County, Ill., March
13, 1933 (age 90 years, 37
days).
Interment at Linwood Cemetery, Pana, Ill.
|
|
John Scott Harrison (1844-1926) —
also known as J. Scott Harrison —
of Kansas City, Jackson
County, Mo.; Powersite, Taney
County, Mo.
Born in North Bend, Hamilton
County, Ohio, November
16, 1844.
Democrat. Nominated in 1893 by President Grover
Cleveland to be Surveyor of Customs at Kansas City, Mo.; the
nomination was rejected by the Senate.
Died, from pneumonia,
in Kansas City, Jackson
County, Mo., January
8, 1926 (age 81 years, 53
days).
Interment at Elmwood
Cemetery, Kansas City, Mo.
|
|
Kiliaen Van Rensselaer (1845-1905) —
of Manhattan, New York
County, N.Y.
Born in Albany, Albany
County, N.Y., February
14, 1845.
Served in the Union Army during the Civil War; customhouse
broker; Vice-Consul
for Nicaragua in New
York, N.Y., 1901-04.
Presbyterian.
Died in Manhattan, New York
County, N.Y., November
26, 1905 (age 60 years, 285
days).
Interment at Green-Wood
Cemetery, Brooklyn, N.Y.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of William Paterson Van Rensselaer and Sarah (Rogers) Van Rensselaer;
married to Olivia Phelps Atterbury; nephew of Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer; grandson of Stephen
Van Rensselaer; grandnephew of Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer and Rensselaer
Westerlo; great-grandson of William
Paterson; second great-grandson of Philip
Livingston; second great-grandnephew of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston and William
Livingston; third great-grandson of Dirck
Ten Broeck; third great-grandnephew of John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775) and Gilbert
Livingston; fourth great-grandson of Stephanus
Van Cortlandt, Robert
Livingston the Elder and Pieter
Van Brugh; fourth great-grandnephew of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724), Jacobus
Van Cortlandt, Johannes
Cuyler and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); fifth great-grandson of Dirck
Wesselse Ten Broeck; first cousin once removed of Philip
Schuyler; first cousin twice removed of Edward
Philip Livingston and John
Eliot Thayer Jr.; first cousin thrice removed of Philip
P. Schuyler, Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, James
Livingston and Henry
Brockholst Livingston; first cousin four times removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775), Pierre
Van Cortlandt, Philip
John Schuyler and Stephen
John Schuyler; first cousin five times removed of Robert
Livingston the Younger, Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746), Cornelis
Cuyler and John
Cruger Jr.; first cousin six times removed of David
Davidse Schuyler and Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler; second cousin once removed of Edward
Livingston (1796-1840); second cousin twice removed of Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792), Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Henry
Walter Livingston, Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843), William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, William
Jay and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873); second cousin thrice removed of Volkert
Petrus Douw, Nicholas
Bayard, Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Hendrick
Kiliaen Van Rensselaer, Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), Philip
Van Cortlandt, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., Killian
Killian Van Rensselaer, Edward
Livingston (1764-1836), Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler and James
Parker; second cousin four times removed of James
Jay, Henry
Cruger, John
Jay and Frederick
Jay; third cousin once removed of Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Gerrit
Smith, William
Duer, Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard, Elizabeth
Cady Stanton, John
Jay II and Robert
Reginald Livingston; third cousin twice removed of Leonard
Gansevoort, Leonard
Gansevoort Jr., Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, James
Alexander Hamilton, Peter
Gansevoort, Hamilton
Fish and John
Cortlandt Parker; fourth cousin of Nicholas
Fish, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936), John
Kean, Hamilton
Fish Kean and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870); fourth cousin once removed of Gilbert
Livingston Thompson, James
Adams Ekin, John
Jacob Astor III, Richard
Wayne Parker, Charles
Wolcott Parker, Herbert
Livingston Satterlee, Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933), Bronson
Murray Cutting, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991), Robert
Winthrop Kean and Brockholst
Livingston. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
William Waldorf Astor (1848-1919) —
also known as "Viscount Astor" —
of New York, New York
County, N.Y.; Taplow, Buckinghamshire, England.
Born in New York, New York
County, N.Y., March
31, 1848.
Republican. Member of New York
state assembly from New York County 11th District, 1878; member
of New
York state senate 10th District, 1880-81; candidate for U.S.
Representative from New York, 1880 (7th District), 1881 (11th
District); U.S. Minister to Italy, 1882-85; renounced his American citizenship and became a
British subject in 1899; became a Baron in 1916 and a Viscount in
1917; member of the British House of Lords.
Heir to Astor family fortune of about $100 million; moved to England
in 1890 and became a British subject.
Died, of heart
disease, in Brighton, England,
October
18, 1919 (age 71 years, 201
days).
Cremated.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of John
Jacob Astor III and Charlotte Augusta (Gibbes) Astor; married, June 6,
1878, to Mary Dahlgren Paul; great-grandson of John
Armstrong Jr. and John Jacob Astor; great-grandnephew of Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), James
Armstrong and Edward
Livingston (1764-1836); second great-grandson of John
Armstrong and Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775); third great-grandson of Robert
Livingston (1688-1775); third great-grandnephew of John
Livingston and Gilbert
Livingston; fourth great-grandson of Robert
Livingston the Elder and Robert
Livingston the Younger; fourth great-grandnephew of Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); fifth great-grandson of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724); first cousin of Margaret Astor Ward (who
married John
Winthrop Chanler); first cousin once removed of William
Astor Chanler, Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler, Helen
Roosevelt Robinson and William Vincent Astor (who married Helen
Dinsmore Huntington); first cousin four times removed of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Philip
Livingston, William
Livingston, Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer and James
Livingston; first cousin five times removed of Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746) and Philip
P. Schuyler; first cousin six times removed of David
Davidse Schuyler and Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler; second cousin thrice removed of Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, Philip
Van Cortlandt, Henry
Brockholst Livingston, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler and Maturin
Livingston; second cousin four times removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Pierre
Van Cortlandt, Philip
John Schuyler, Stephen
John Schuyler, Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792) and Peter
Samuel Schuyler; second cousin five times removed of Matthew
Clarkson; third cousin once removed of Peter
Goelet Gerry, Ogden
Livingston Mills and Robert
Reginald Livingston; third cousin twice 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, Philip
Schuyler, James
Alexander Hamilton, Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), William
Jay, Gerrit
Smith, Charles
Ludlow Livingston, Hamilton
Fish and Elizabeth
Cady Stanton; third cousin thrice removed of Nicholas
Bayard and James
Parker; fourth cousin once removed of Gilbert
Livingston Thompson, Edward
Livingston (1796-1840), William
Duer, Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer, Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard, John
Jay II, Nicholas
Fish, Hamilton
Fish Jr. and Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer. |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Roosevelt
family of New York City, New York; Chanler-Astor-Ward
family of New York City, New York (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also Wikipedia article — U.S.
State Dept career summary — NNDB
dossier |
|
|
Robert Ray Hamilton (1851-1890) —
of New York, New York
County, N.Y.
Born in New York, New York
County, N.Y., March
18, 1851.
Republican. Lawyer;
member of New York
state assembly from New York County 11th District, 1881, 1886-89;
in July 1889, while staying in Atlantic City, he was caught in a
national scandal,
after his wife, Eva, stabbed a nurse; she was arrested and tried; it
came out that Eva was still
married to another man, that she had bought a baby for $10 and
told Hamilton he was the father, to induce him to marry her; when
this was publicized,
Hamilton sued for divorce; as the case dragged on, he moved to
Wyoming to help a friend establish a hotel.
While on a hunting
trip, he drowned
while attempting to ford the Snake River, in Uinta County (part now
in Teton
County), Wyo., August
23, 1890 (age 39 years, 158
days).
Original interment somewhere in Teton County, Wyo.; reinterment in 1892 at Green-Wood
Cemetery, Brooklyn, N.Y.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Schuyler Hamilton and Cornelia (Ray) Hamilton; grandnephew of James
Alexander Hamilton; great-grandson of Alexander
Hamilton; great-grandnephew of Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler; second great-grandson of Philip
John Schuyler; second great-grandnephew of Stephen
John Schuyler, Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer and Robert
Van Rensselaer; third great-grandson of Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746); fourth great-grandson of Stephanus
Van Cortlandt, Robert
Livingston the Younger and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); fourth great-grandnephew of Jacobus
Van Cortlandt; fifth great-grandson of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724); fifth great-grandnephew of Robert
Livingston the Elder; first cousin twice removed of Philip
Schuyler; first cousin thrice removed of Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792) and Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer; first cousin four times removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Volkert
Petrus Douw, Pierre
Van Cortlandt, Hendrick
Kiliaen Van Rensselaer, James
Livingston and Killian
Killian Van Rensselaer; first cousin five times removed of John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775), Gilbert
Livingston and Philip
P. Schuyler; first cousin six times removed of David
Davidse Schuyler and Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler; second cousin twice removed of Henry
Walter Livingston; second cousin thrice removed of Nicholas
Bayard, Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), Philip
Van Cortlandt, Leonard
Gansevoort, Leonard
Gansevoort Jr., Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., Edward
Livingston (1764-1836), Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Maturin
Livingston and James
Parker; second cousin four times removed of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Philip
Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775), William
Livingston, James
Jay, John
Jay, Frederick
Jay and Peter
Samuel Schuyler; second cousin five times removed of Matthew
Clarkson; third cousin once removed of Edward
Livingston (1796-1840), Cortlandt
Schuyler Van Rensselaer and John
Eliot Thayer Jr.; third cousin twice removed of Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Peter
Gansevoort, Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Gerrit
Smith, Elizabeth
Cady Stanton and John
Cortlandt Parker; third cousin thrice removed of Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, Henry
Brockholst Livingston, Peter
Augustus Jay and William
Jay; fourth cousin once removed of Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer, James
Adams Ekin, John
Jacob Astor III, Richard
Wayne Parker, Charles
Wolcott Parker, Charles
Ludlow Livingston and Bronson
Murray Cutting. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also Wikipedia
article — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
John Kean (1852-1914) —
of Elizabeth, Union
County, N.J.; Union Township, Union
County, N.J.
Born in Union Township, Union
County, N.J., December
4, 1852.
Republican. U.S.
Representative from New Jersey 3rd District, 1883-85, 1887-89;
candidate for Governor of
New Jersey, 1892; delegate to Republican National Convention from
New Jersey, 1896,
1904;
U.S.
Senator from New Jersey, 1899-1911.
Died November
4, 1914 (age 61 years, 335
days).
Interment at Evergreen
Cemetery, Hillside, N.J.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of John Kean (1814-1895) and Lucinetta 'Lucy' (Halsted) Kean; brother
of Hamilton
Fish Kean; uncle of Robert
Winthrop Kean; granduncle of Thomas
Howard Kean; great-grandson of John
Kean (1756-1795); great-grandnephew of Philip
Peter Livingston; great-granduncle of Thomas
Howard Kean Jr.; second great-grandson of Peter
Van Brugh Livingston and Lewis
Morris; second great-grandnephew of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Philip
Livingston and William
Livingston; third great-grandson of James
Alexander; third great-grandnephew of John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775) and Gilbert
Livingston; fourth great-grandson of Robert
Livingston the Elder and Pieter
Van Brugh; fourth great-grandnephew of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724), Abraham
de Peyster, Johannes
Cuyler, Johannes
de Peyster and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); first cousin of Nicholas
Fish and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936); first cousin once removed of Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991); first cousin twice removed of Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873) and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996); first cousin thrice removed of Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, John
Stevens III, Henry
Brockholst Livingston, Hamilton
Fish (born 1951) and Alexa
Fish Ward; first cousin four times removed of Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston and Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775); first cousin five times removed of Robert
Livingston the Younger, Johannes
DePeyster, Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746), Cornelis
Cuyler and John
Cruger Jr.; first cousin six times removed of David
Davidse Schuyler and Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler; second cousin twice removed of Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Henry
Walter Livingston, Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843), Rensselaer
Westerlo, Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer and William
Jay; second cousin thrice removed of Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), Philip
Van Cortlandt, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr. and Edward
Livingston (1764-1836); second cousin four times removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Pierre
Van Cortlandt, Philip
John Schuyler, Matthew
Clarkson, Philip
P. Schuyler, Stephen
John Schuyler, Henry
Cruger and Henry
Rutgers; third cousin once removed of Philip
Schuyler, Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Edward
Livingston (1796-1840), William
Duer, Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer, Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard and John
Jay II; third cousin twice removed of Hamilton
Fish (1808-1893); third cousin thrice removed of Nicholas
Bayard, Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792), James
Livingston, Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler, Philip
DePeyster and James
Parker; fourth cousin of Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870); fourth cousin once removed of Gilbert
Livingston Thompson, John
Jacob Astor III, Herbert
Livingston Satterlee, Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933), Bronson
Murray Cutting, Robert
Reginald Livingston and Brockholst
Livingston. |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Chapin-Fish
family of New York City, New York; Kean
family of New Jersey (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Arthur Alexis Birney (1852-1916) —
also known as Arthur A. Birney —
of Washington,
D.C.
Born in Paris, France,
May
28, 1852.
Republican. Lawyer; law
professor; U.S.
Attorney for the District of Columbia, 1893-97.
Episcopalian.
Died September
4, 1916 (age 64 years, 99
days).
Burial location unknown.
|
|
Henry St. George Tucker (1853-1932) —
of Staunton,
Va.; Lexington,
Va.
Born in Winchester,
Va., April 5,
1853.
Democrat. Lawyer; U.S.
Representative from Virginia 10th District, 1889-97, 1922-32;
died in office 1932; law
professor; delegate to Democratic National Convention from
Virginia, 1912.
Member, American Bar
Association.
Died in Lexington,
Va., July 23,
1932 (age 79 years, 109
days).
Interment at Oak
Grove Cemetery, Lexington, Va.
|
|
John Augustine Marshall (1854-1941) —
of Salt Lake City, Salt Lake
County, Utah.
Born near Warrenton, Fauquier
County, Va., September
5, 1854.
Probate judge in Utah, 1888-89; member of Utah
territorial House of Representatives, 1892; U.S.
District Judge for Utah, 1896-1915; resigned 1915.
Died in Salt Lake City, Salt Lake
County, Utah, April 4,
1941 (age 86 years, 211
days).
Interment at Mt.
Olivet Cemetery, Salt Lake City, Utah.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of John Marshall (1804-1855) and Rebecca Boyd (Smith) Marshall;
married, October
1, 1888, to Jessie Kirkpatrick; grandson of James
Markham Marshall; grandnephew of John
Marshall (1755-1835), Alexander
Keith Marshall and Thomas
Morris; great-grandson of Robert
Morris; third great-grandnephew of Richard
Randolph; first cousin once removed of Thomas
Marshall and James
Keith Marshall; first cousin four times removed of Richard
Bland and Peyton
Randolph (1721-1775); second cousin once removed of William
Marshall Bullitt and Alexander
Scott Bullitt; second cousin twice removed of Thomas
Mann Randolph Jr.; second cousin thrice removed of Theodorick
Bland, Thomas
Jefferson, Edmund
Jenings Randolph, Beverley
Randolph and John
Randolph of Roanoke; third cousin once removed of Benjamin
Franklin Randolph, Meriwether
Lewis Randolph and George
Wythe Randolph; third cousin twice removed of Henry
Lee, Charles
Lee, Richard
Bland Lee, Edmund
Jennings Lee, Martha
Jefferson Randolph, Dabney
Carr, Peyton
Randolph (1779-1828) and Henry
St. George Tucker; fourth cousin of Thomas
Jefferson Coolidge; fourth cousin once removed of Francis
Wayles Eppes, Dabney
Smith Carr, Edmund
Randolph, Nathaniel
Beverly Tucker, Carter
Henry Harrison, John
Breckinridge Castleman and John
Gardner Coolidge. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also federal
judicial profile — Biographical
Directory of Federal Judges |
|
|
Russell Benjamin Harrison (1854-1936) —
also known as Russell Lord Harrison —
of Indianapolis, Marion
County, Ind.
Born in Oxford, Butler
County, Ohio, August
12, 1854.
Republican. Newspaper
work; served in the U.S. Army during the Spanish-American War; lawyer;
member of Indiana
state house of representatives, 1921-24; member of Indiana
state senate, 1925-28; Honorary
Consul for Mexico in Indianapolis,
Ind., 1929.
Member, Union
League.
Died, from heart
disease, in Indianapolis, Marion
County, Ind., December
13, 1936 (age 82 years, 123
days).
Interment at Crown
Hill Cemetery, Indianapolis, Ind.
|
|
George Scott Shackelford (1856-1918) —
also known as George S. Shackelford —
Born in Warrenton, Fauquier
County, Va., December
12, 1856.
Member of Virginia
state senate 15th District, 1904-07.
Episcopalian.
Died in Orange, Orange
County, Va., December
30, 1918 (age 62 years, 18
days).
Interment at Graham
Cemetery, Orange, Va.
|
 |
Joseph Benjamin Dimmick (1858-1920) —
also known as J. Benjamin Dimmick —
of Scranton, Lackawanna
County, Pa.
Born in Honesdale, Wayne
County, Pa., October
3, 1858.
Republican. Lawyer; mayor
of Scranton, Pa., 1906-09; Red Cross Commissioner to Switzerland
during World War I.
Died in Stratford, Ontario,
January
14, 1920 (age 61 years, 103
days).
Burial location unknown.
|
|
Cortlandt Schuyler Van Rensselaer (1859-1927) —
also known as Cortlandt S. Van Rensselaer —
of Manhattan, New York
County, N.Y.
Born in Albany, Albany
County, N.Y., November
22, 1859.
Republican. Lawyer;
assistant U.S. Attorney; candidate for U.S.
Representative from New York 10th District, 1890.
Member, Sons of
the Revolution; Society
of Colonial Wars; Society
of the Cincinnati.
Died, from nephritis,
in Manhattan, New York
County, N.Y., January
15, 1927 (age 67 years, 54
days).
Interment at Albany
Rural Cemetery, Menands, N.Y.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Gratz Van Rensselaer and Catherine Van Cortlandt (Van Rensselaer)
Van Renss; married, June 17,
1891, to Miss Horace Macauley; great-grandnephew of Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer and Robert
Van Rensselaer; third great-grandson of Robert
Livingston the Younger; fourth great-grandson of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724); fourth great-grandnephew of Stephanus
Van Cortlandt, Robert
Livingston the Elder, Jacobus
Van Cortlandt and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); first cousin twice removed of Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer and Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler; first cousin thrice removed of Volkert
Petrus Douw, Hendrick
Kiliaen Van Rensselaer, James
Livingston and Killian
Killian Van Rensselaer; first cousin four times removed of Philip
P. Schuyler; first cousin five times removed of John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775), Gilbert
Livingston and Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746); first cousin six times removed of David
Davidse Schuyler and Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler; second cousin once removed of James
Alexander Hamilton and Philip
Schuyler; second cousin twice removed of Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), Leonard
Gansevoort, Leonard
Gansevoort Jr., Edward
Livingston (1764-1836), Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847) and Maturin
Livingston; second cousin thrice removed of Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792) and Peter
Samuel Schuyler; second cousin four times removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Philip
Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775), Pierre
Van Cortlandt, William
Livingston, James
Jay, Philip
John Schuyler, Matthew
Clarkson (1733-1800), Stephen
John Schuyler, John
Jay and Frederick
Jay; third cousin once removed of Peter
Gansevoort, Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Gerrit
Smith, Elizabeth
Cady Stanton and Robert
Ray Hamilton; third cousin twice removed of Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Henry
Walter Livingston and John
Eliot Thayer Jr.; third cousin thrice removed of Nicholas
Bayard, Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, Philip
Van Cortlandt, Henry
Brockholst Livingston, Matthew
Clarkson (1758-1825), Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., James
Parker, Peter
Augustus Jay and William
Jay; fourth cousin of John
Jacob Astor III; fourth cousin once removed of Edward
Livingston (1796-1840), Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer, William
Waldorf Astor, Peter
Goelet Gerry and Ogden
Livingston Mills. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|
 |
Carter Henry Harrison II (1860-1953) —
also known as Carter H. Harrison —
of Chicago, Cook
County, Ill.
Born in Chicago, Cook
County, Ill., April
23, 1860.
Democrat. Lawyer; real estate
business; newspaper
editor and publisher; mayor
of Chicago, Ill., 1897-1905, 1911-15; defeated in primary, 1915;
delegate to Democratic National Convention from Illinois, 1900,
1916,
1920,
1932,
1936;
U.S.
Collector of Internal Revenue at Chicago, Illinois, 1934-44.
Member, Freemasons;
Knights
Templar; Sons of
the American Revolution; Sons of
the Revolution; Society
of the Cincinnati; Veterans of
Foreign Wars; American
Legion; Society
of Colonial Wars; Society
of the War of 1812; Military
Order of the World Wars.
Died in Chicago, Cook
County, Ill., December
25, 1953 (age 93 years, 246
days).
Interment at Graceland
Cemetery, Chicago, Ill.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Carter
Henry Harrison and Sophonisba Grayson (Preston) Harrison; married
to Marguerite Stearns; married, December
14, 1887, to Edith Ogden; great-grandson of William
Russell (1758-1825); great-grandnephew of Alfred
William Grayson and Benjamin
William Sheridan Cabell; second great-grandson of William
Russell (1735-1793) and William
Grayson; second great-grandnephew of Benjamin
Harrison (1726-1791), William
Cabell and William
Smallwood; third great-grandnephew of Richard
Randolph; first cousin once removed of John
Breckinridge Castleman; first cousin twice removed of Joseph
Cabell Breckinridge (1788-1823), Robert
Jefferson Breckinridge, William
Lewis Cabell and George
Craighead Cabell; first cousin thrice removed of Thomas
Jefferson, Carter
Bassett Harrison, William
Cabell Jr., William
Henry Cabell, William
Henry Harrison (1773-1841) and Beverly
Robinson Grayson; first cousin four times removed of Richard
Bland, Peyton
Randolph (1721-1775), Robert
Carter Nicholas (1729-1780) and William
Fitzhugh; second cousin once removed of John
Cabell Breckinridge, Peter
Augustus Porter (1827-1864), Robert
Jefferson Breckinridge Jr., William
Campbell Preston Breckinridge and Benjamin
Earl Cabell; second cousin twice removed of Martha
Jefferson Randolph, Dabney
Carr, Frederick
Mortimer Cabell, John
Scott Harrison (1804-1878) and Edward
Carrington Cabell; second cousin thrice removed of Theodorick
Bland, Edmund
Jenings Randolph, George
Nicholas, Beverley
Randolph, James
Monroe (1758-1831), Wilson
Cary Nicholas, John
Nicholas, John
Randolph of Roanoke and John
Robertson; third cousin of Joseph
Cabell Breckinridge (1844-1906), Clifton
Rodes Breckinridge, Peter
Augustus Porter (1853-1925), Levin
Irving Handy, Desha
Breckinridge, Henry
Skillman Breckinridge and Earle
Cabell; third cousin once removed of Francis
Wayles Eppes, Dabney
Smith Carr, Benjamin
Franklin Randolph, Meriwether
Lewis Randolph, George
Wythe Randolph, John
William Leftwich, Benjamin
Harrison (1833-1901), Joel
Walker Flood and John
Scott Harrison (1844-1926); third cousin twice removed of John
Marshall, Henry
Lee, Charles
Lee, Richard
Bland Lee, James
Markham Marshall, Thomas
Mann Randolph Jr., Alexander
Keith Marshall, Edmund
Jennings Lee, Peyton
Randolph (1779-1828), Henry
St. George Tucker, Robert
Carter Nicholas (1787-1857), Thomas
Bell Monroe, James
Monroe (1799-1870) and Stanley
Matthews; third cousin thrice removed of Burwell
Bassett and Samuel
Nicholls Smallwood; fourth cousin of Thomas
Jefferson Coolidge, Russell
Benjamin Harrison, Henry
De La Warr Flood, John
Brady Grayson, Frederick
Madison Roberts and Joel
West Flood; fourth cousin once removed of Thomas
Marshall, James
Keith Marshall, John
Strother Pendleton, Albert
Gallatin Pendleton, Victor
Monroe, Peter
Myndert Dox, Edmund
Randolph, Nathaniel
Beverly Tucker, William
Henry Fitzhugh Lee, John
Gardner Coolidge, Edith
Wilson, Harry
Flood Byrd and William
Henry Harrison (1896-1990). |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Breckinridge-Preston-Harrison-Richardson
family of Virginia (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | Cross-reference: Robert
E. Burke |
|  | See also Wikipedia
article — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|  | Image source: Library of
Congress |
|
|
Hamilton Fish Kean (1862-1941) —
also known as Hamilton F. Kean —
of Elizabeth, Union
County, N.J.
Born in Union Township, Union
County, N.J., February
27, 1862.
Republican. Banker; farmer; chair of
Union County Republican Party, 1900; member of New Jersey
Republican State Committee, 1905-19; delegate to Republican
National Convention from New Jersey, 1916,
1932;
member of Republican
National Committee from New Jersey, 1919-28; U.S.
Senator from New Jersey, 1929-35; defeated, 1924, 1934; delegate
to New Jersey convention to ratify 21st amendment, 1933;
Republican candidate for Presidential Elector for New Jersey, 1940.
Episcopalian.
Member, Sons of
the American Revolution; Society
of Colonial Wars; Freemasons.
Died in Manhattan, New York
County, N.Y., December
27, 1941 (age 79 years, 303
days).
Entombed at Green-Wood
Cemetery, Brooklyn, N.Y.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of John Kean (1814-1895) and Lucinetta 'Lucy' (Halsted) Kean; brother
of John
Kean (1852-1914); married, January
12, 1888, to Katharine Taylor Winthrop; father of Robert
Winthrop Kean; grandfather of Thomas
Howard Kean; great-grandson of John
Kean (1756-1795); great-grandfather of Thomas
Howard Kean Jr.; great-grandnephew of Philip
Peter Livingston; second great-grandson of Peter
Van Brugh Livingston; second great-grandnephew of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Philip
Livingston and William
Livingston; third great-grandson of James
Alexander; third great-grandnephew of John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775) and Gilbert
Livingston; fourth great-grandson of Robert
Livingston the Elder and Pieter
Van Brugh; fourth great-grandnephew of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724), Abraham
de Peyster, Johannes
Cuyler, Johannes
de Peyster and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); first cousin of Nicholas
Fish and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936); first cousin once removed of Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991); first cousin twice removed of Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873) and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996); first cousin thrice removed of Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, John
Stevens III, Henry
Brockholst Livingston, Hamilton
Fish (born 1951) and Alexa
Fish Ward; first cousin four times removed of Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston and Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775); first cousin five times removed of Robert
Livingston the Younger, Johannes
DePeyster, Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746), Cornelis
Cuyler and John
Cruger Jr.; first cousin six times removed of David
Davidse Schuyler and Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler; second cousin twice removed of Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Henry
Walter Livingston, Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843), Rensselaer
Westerlo, Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer and William
Jay; second cousin thrice removed of Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), Philip
Van Cortlandt, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr. and Edward
Livingston (1764-1836); second cousin four times removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Pierre
Van Cortlandt, Philip
John Schuyler, Matthew
Clarkson, Philip
P. Schuyler, Stephen
John Schuyler, Henry
Cruger and Henry
Rutgers; third cousin once removed of Philip
Schuyler, Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Edward
Livingston (1796-1840), William
Duer, Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer, Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard and John
Jay II; third cousin twice removed of Hamilton
Fish (1808-1893); third cousin thrice removed of Nicholas
Bayard, Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792), James
Livingston, Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler, Philip
DePeyster and James
Parker; fourth cousin of Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870); fourth cousin once removed of Gilbert
Livingston Thompson, John
Jacob Astor III, Herbert
Livingston Satterlee, Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933), Bronson
Murray Cutting, Robert
Reginald Livingston and Brockholst
Livingston. |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Chapin-Fish
family of New York City, New York; Kean
family of New Jersey (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
John Gardner Coolidge (1863-1936) —
of Boston, Suffolk
County, Mass.
Born in Boston, Suffolk
County, Mass., July 4,
1863.
Republican. U.S. Vice Consul in Pretoria, as of 1900; U.S. Minister to Nicaragua, 1908.
Unitarian.
Died in Boston, Suffolk
County, Mass., February
28, 1936 (age 72 years, 239
days).
Interment at Mt.
Auburn Cemetery, Cambridge, Mass.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Joseph Randolph Coolidge and Julia (Gardner) Coolidge; married, April
29, 1909, to Helen Granger Stevens; nephew of Thomas
Jefferson Coolidge; grandnephew of Benjamin
Franklin Randolph, Meriwether
Lewis Randolph and George
Wythe Randolph; great-grandson of Thomas
Mann Randolph Jr. and Martha
Jefferson Randolph; second great-grandson of Thomas
Jefferson and John
Lowell; second great-grandnephew of Timothy
Pickering; third great-grandson of Archibald
Cary; fourth great-grandson of Richard
Randolph; first cousin of Augustus
Peabody Gardner; first cousin twice removed of Francis
Wayles Eppes and William
Amory Gardner Minot; first cousin thrice removed of Dabney
Carr and John
Wayles Eppes; first cousin four times removed of John
Randolph of Roanoke; first cousin five times removed of Richard
Bland and Peyton
Randolph (1721-1775); second cousin once removed of Frederick
Madison Roberts; second cousin twice removed of Dudley
Leavitt Pickman and Dabney
Smith Carr; second cousin thrice removed of Benjamin
Goodhue, John
Marshall, James
Markham Marshall, Alexander
Keith Marshall and John
Wingate Weeks (1781-1853); second cousin four times removed of Theodorick
Bland, Edmund
Jenings Randolph and Beverley
Randolph; third cousin twice removed of Thomas
Marshall, John
Jordan Crittenden, Thomas
Turpin Crittenden, Robert
Crittenden, James
Keith Marshall, Carter
Henry Harrison and John
Breckinridge Castleman; third cousin thrice removed of Henry
Lee, Charles
Lee, Richard
Bland Lee, Edmund
Jennings Lee, Peyton
Randolph (1779-1828), Henry
St. George Tucker, John
Robertson, Benjamin
William Sheridan Cabell and John
Forbes Kerry; fourth cousin of Edith
Wilson; fourth cousin once removed of Alexander
Parker Crittenden, Thomas
Leonidas Crittenden, Thomas
Theodore Crittenden, Archelaus
Marius Woodson, John
Augustine Marshall, Carter
Henry Harrison II, John
Wingate Weeks (1860-1926) and John
Lee Saltonstall. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also U.S. State Dept career summary — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Augustus Peabody Gardner (1865-1918) —
also known as Augustus P. Gardner —
of Hamilton, Essex
County, Mass.
Born in Boston, Suffolk
County, Mass., November
5, 1865.
Republican. Served in the U.S. Army during the Spanish-American War;
member of Massachusetts
state senate, 1900-01; U.S.
Representative from Massachusetts 6th District, 1902-17; resigned
1917; candidate for Governor of
Massachusetts, 1913; major in the U.S. Army during World War I.
Died, of pneumonia,
while in the
military service at Camp Wheeler, Macon, Bibb
County, Ga., January
14, 1918 (age 52 years, 70
days).
Interment at Arlington
National Cemetery, Arlington, Va.
|
|
William Astor Chanler (1867-1934) —
of New York, New York
County, N.Y.; Barrytown, Dutchess
County, N.Y.; Paris, France.
Born in Newport, Newport
County, R.I., June 11,
1867.
Democrat. Explorer;
author;
member of New York
state assembly from New York County 5th District, 1898; served in
the U.S. Army during the Spanish-American War; U.S.
Representative from New York 14th District, 1899-1901.
Member, Tammany
Hall.
Injured in an automobile accident in France, 1915, and lost a
lower leg.
Died in Mentone (Menton), France,
March
4, 1934 (age 66 years, 266
days).
Interment at Trinity
Cemetery, Manhattan, N.Y.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of John
Winthrop Chanler and Margaret Astor (Ward) Chanler; brother of Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler; married 1903 to Minnie
'Beatrice' Ashley; grandnephew of John
Jacob Astor III; second great-grandson of John
Armstrong Jr.; second great-grandnephew of Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), James
Armstrong and Edward
Livingston; third great-grandson of John
Armstrong and Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775); fourth great-grandson of Robert
Livingston (1688-1775); fourth great-grandnephew of John
Livingston and Gilbert
Livingston; fifth great-grandson of Robert
Livingston the Elder and Robert
Livingston the Younger; fifth great-grandnephew of Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); sixth great-grandson of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724); first cousin once removed of William
Waldorf Astor; first cousin five times removed of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Philip
Livingston, William
Livingston, Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer and James
Livingston; first cousin six times removed of Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746) and Philip
P. Schuyler; first cousin seven times removed of David
Davidse Schuyler and Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler; second cousin of Helen
Roosevelt Robinson; second cousin four times removed of Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, Philip
Van Cortlandt, Henry
Brockholst Livingston, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler and Maturin
Livingston; second cousin five times removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Pierre
Van Cortlandt, Philip
John Schuyler, Stephen
John Schuyler, Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792) and Peter
Samuel Schuyler; 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, Philip
Schuyler, James
Alexander Hamilton, Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), William
Jay, Gerrit
Smith, Charles
Ludlow Livingston, Hamilton
Fish and Elizabeth
Cady Stanton; fourth cousin of Peter
Goelet Gerry, Ogden
Livingston Mills and Robert
Reginald Livingston. |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Chanler-Astor-Ward
family of New York City, New York (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Thomas Francis Bayard Jr. (1868-1942) —
also known as Thomas F. Bayard —
of Wilmington, New Castle
County, Del.
Born in Wilmington, New Castle
County, Del., June 4,
1868.
Democrat. Lawyer; Delaware
Democratic state chair, 1906-16; U.S.
Senator from Delaware, 1922-29; defeated, 1928, 1930; delegate to
Democratic National Convention from Delaware, 1924
(member, Platform
and Resolutions Committee).
Episcopalian.
Died in Wilmington, New Castle
County, Del., July 12,
1942 (age 74 years, 38
days).
Interment at Old
Swedes Church Cemetery, Wilmington, Del.
|
 |
Harry Bartow Hawes (1869-1947) —
also known as Harry B. Hawes —
of St.
Louis, Mo.
Born in Covington, Kenton
County, Ky., November
15, 1869.
Democrat. Lawyer;
delegate to Democratic National Convention from Missouri, 1904,
1928;
member, Committee to Notify Presidential Nominee, 1904,
1916;
member of Missouri
state house of representatives from St. Louis City 3rd District,
1917-18; served in the U.S. Army during World War I; U.S.
Representative from Missouri 11th District, 1921-26; U.S.
Senator from Missouri, 1926-33; resigned 1933.
Episcopalian.
Member, Sons of
the American Revolution; Sons
of Confederate Veterans; American
Legion; Reserve
Officers Association; Military
Order of the World Wars; American Bar
Association; American
Society for International Law; American
Economic Association; Izaak
Walton League; Audubon
Society; American
Forestry Association; National Rifle
Association.
Died in Washington,
D.C., July 31,
1947 (age 77 years, 258
days).
Cremated;
ashes scattered in a private or family graveyard, Ripley County, Mo.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Smith Nicholas Hawes and Susan Elizabeth (Simrall) Hawes; married,
November
15, 1899, to Elizabeth Eppes Osborne Robinson; grandson of Richard
Hawes; grandnephew of Robert
Carter Nicholas (1787-1857) and Albert
Gallatin Hawes; great-grandson of George
Nicholas; great-grandnephew of Wilson
Cary Nicholas, John
Nicholas and Aylett
Hawes; second great-grandson of Robert
Carter Nicholas (1729-1780); first cousin twice removed of Peyton
Randolph; first cousin four times removed of Benjamin
Harrison (1726-1791) and William
Fitzhugh; second cousin once removed of Peter
Myndert Dox, Aylett
Hawes Buckner and Edmund
Randolph; second cousin thrice removed of John
Walker, Carter
Bassett Harrison, Francis
Walker and William
Henry Harrison; third cousin of Edmund
Randolph Cocke; third cousin once removed of Thomas
Marshall, James
Keith Marshall and Francis
Beverley Biddle; third cousin twice removed of John
Scott Harrison (1804-1878); third cousin thrice removed of Burwell
Bassett; fourth cousin once removed of Thomas
Walker Gilmer, Carter
Henry Harrison, Benjamin
Harrison (1833-1901), William
Henry Fitzhugh Lee, John
Breckinridge Castleman and John
Scott Harrison (1844-1926). |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | Cross-reference: John
J. Cochran |
|  | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page |
|  | Image source: Missouri Official Manual
1921 |
|
 |
Lewis Stuyvesant Chanler (1869-1942) —
also known as Lewis S. Chanler —
of Barrytown, Dutchess
County, N.Y.; Manhattan, New York
County, N.Y.
Born in Newport, Newport
County, R.I., September
24, 1869.
Democrat. Lawyer; Lieutenant
Governor of New York, 1907-08; candidate for Governor of
New York, 1908; member of New York
state assembly from Dutchess County 2nd District, 1910-12.
Died, from heart
disease, in Manhattan, New York
County, N.Y., February
28, 1942 (age 72 years, 157
days).
Interment at St. Paul's Episcopal Church Cemetery, Glen Cove, Long Island,
N.Y.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of John
Winthrop Chanler and Margaret Astor (Ward) Chanler; brother of William
Astor Chanler; married, September
24, 1890, to Alice Chamberlain; married, May 23,
1921, to Julia Lynch (Olin) Benkard; grandnephew of John
Jacob Astor III; second great-grandson of John
Armstrong Jr.; second great-grandnephew of Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), James
Armstrong and Edward
Livingston; third great-grandson of John
Armstrong and Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775); fourth great-grandson of Robert
Livingston (1688-1775); fourth great-grandnephew of John
Livingston and Gilbert
Livingston; fifth great-grandson of Robert
Livingston the Elder and Robert
Livingston the Younger; fifth great-grandnephew of Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); sixth great-grandson of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724); first cousin once removed of William
Waldorf Astor; first cousin five times removed of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Philip
Livingston, William
Livingston, Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer and James
Livingston; first cousin six times removed of Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746) and Philip
P. Schuyler; first cousin seven times removed of David
Davidse Schuyler and Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler; second cousin of Helen
Roosevelt Robinson; second cousin four times removed of Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, Philip
Van Cortlandt, Henry
Brockholst Livingston, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler and Maturin
Livingston; second cousin five times removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Pierre
Van Cortlandt, Philip
John Schuyler, Stephen
John Schuyler, Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792) and Peter
Samuel Schuyler; 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, Philip
Schuyler, James
Alexander Hamilton, Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), William
Jay, Gerrit
Smith, Charles
Ludlow Livingston, Hamilton
Fish and Elizabeth
Cady Stanton; fourth cousin of Peter
Goelet Gerry, Ogden
Livingston Mills and Robert
Reginald Livingston. |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Chanler-Astor-Ward
family of New York City, New York (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|  | Image source: New York Red Book
1907 |
|
|
Hudson Snowden Marshall (1870-1931) —
also known as H. Snowden Marshall —
of Manhattan, New York
County, N.Y.
Born in Baltimore,
Md., January
15, 1870.
Lawyer;
law partner of Bartow
S. Weeks, George
Gordon Battle, and James
A. O'Gorman; U.S.
Attorney for the Southern District of New York, 1913-17; in
1915-16, U.S. Rep. Frank
Buchanan (who was at the time being indicted by a federal grand
jury) introduced impeachment
resolutions against Marshall; the charges, including malfeasance
in the handling of past cases, were investigated
by a House Judiciary subcommittee, which held hearings in New York,
and inquired into the proceedings of the grand jury which had
indicted Rep. Buchanan; Marshall wrote a critical letter to the
subcommittee, impugning its motives; based on this letter, the full
House voted to find him in contempt
of Congress, and ordered his
arrest; on appeal, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that the
authority of the House to punish for contempt extended only to
actions which directly interfered with its proceedings.
Member, American Bar
Association.
Died in Manhattan, New York
County, N.Y., May 29,
1931 (age 61 years, 134
days).
Interment at Kensico
Cemetery, Valhalla, N.Y.
|
|
Charles Ludlow Livingston (b. 1870) —
also known as C. Ludlow Livingston —
of Oakmont, Allegheny
County, Pa.; Pittsburgh, Allegheny
County, Pa.; Westport, Essex
County, N.Y.
Born in Staten Island, Richmond
County, N.Y., June 10,
1870.
Republican. Electrical
engineer;
lawyer;
U.S. Consul in Salina Cruz, 1908-10; Swansea, 1910-15; Barbados, 1915-20; Charlottetown, 1921-22.
Catholic.
Member, Society
of the Cincinnati; Knights
of Columbus.
Burial location unknown.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Ludlow Livingston and Mary (Keif) Livingston; married, November
12, 1891, to Mary Keating; father of Philip Anson Livingston and
Brockholst
Livingston; great-grandson of Henry
Brockholst Livingston and Henry
Walter Livingston; second great-grandson of William
Livingston and Walter
Livingston; second great-grandnephew of Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Philip
Livingston, Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794) and Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792); third great-grandson of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790); third great-grandnephew of John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775), Gilbert
Livingston, Philip
John Schuyler, Philip
P. Schuyler and Stephen
John Schuyler; fourth great-grandson of Robert
Livingston the Elder, Anthony
Brockholls, Pieter
Van Brugh, Phillip
French and Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746); fourth great-grandnephew of Johannes
Cuyler; fifth great-grandson of Stephanus
Van Cortlandt, Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724) and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); fifth great-grandnephew of Jacobus
Van Cortlandt; first cousin once removed of Henry
Brockholst Ledyard; first cousin twice removed of Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843), William
Jay and Edward
Livingston (1796-1840); first cousin thrice removed of Philip
Peter Livingston and Matthew
Clarkson; first cousin four times removed of Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775), Peter
Samuel Schuyler and Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler; first cousin five times removed of Robert
Livingston the Younger, Cornelis
Cuyler, Stephanus
Bayard, John
Cruger Jr. and Pierre
Van Cortlandt; first cousin six times removed of David
Davidse Schuyler and Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler; second cousin once removed of John
Jay II; second cousin twice removed of Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Rensselaer
Westerlo, Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859) and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873); second cousin thrice removed of Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), Philip
Van Cortlandt, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., Edward
Livingston (1764-1836) and James
Alexander Hamilton; second cousin four times removed of James
Jay, Nicholas
Bayard, Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Henry
Cruger, Robert
Van Rensselaer, John
Jay, Frederick
Jay, James
Livingston and James
Parker; second cousin five times removed of Volkert
Petrus Douw, Hendrick
Kiliaen Van Rensselaer and Killian
Killian Van Rensselaer; third cousin of Bronson
Murray Cutting; third cousin once removed of Philip
Schuyler, William
Duer, Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer, Denning
Duer and Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933); third cousin twice removed of Hamilton
Fish; third cousin thrice removed of Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Maturin
Livingston and John
Cortlandt Parker; fourth cousin of Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer, Nicholas
Fish, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936), John
Kean, Hamilton
Fish Kean and Herbert
Livingston Satterlee; fourth cousin once removed of Gilbert
Livingston Thompson, John
Jacob Astor III, Robert
Ray Hamilton, Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991), Robert
Reginald Livingston and Robert
Winthrop Kean. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|
|
Karl Cortlandt Schuyler (1877-1933) —
also known as Karl C. Schuyler —
of Colorado Springs, El Paso
County, Colo.; Denver,
Colo.
Born in Colorado Springs, El Paso
County, Colo., April 3,
1877.
Republican. Lawyer; oil
business; bank
director; delegate to Republican National Convention from
Colorado, 1916;
U.S.
Senator from Colorado, 1932-33; defeated, 1920, 1932.
Struck
by an automobile, and subsequently died in Lenox Hill Hospital,
Manhattan, New York
County, N.Y., July 31,
1933 (age 56 years, 119
days).
Entombed in mausoleum at Fairmount
Cemetery, Denver, Colo.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Frederick Schuyler and Eleanor 'Nellie' (Farnan) Schuyler; married
to Delia Alsena Shepard (who later married Eugene
Donald Millikin); grandnephew of George
Washington Schuyler; fourth great-grandnephew of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724) and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); first cousin once removed of Eugene
Schuyler; first cousin five times removed of John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775), Gilbert
Livingston and Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746); first cousin six times removed of David
Davidse Schuyler and Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler; second cousin four times removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Philip
Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775), Pierre
Van Cortlandt, William
Livingston, Philip
John Schuyler, Philip
P. Schuyler and Stephen
John Schuyler; third cousin thrice removed of Nicholas
Bayard, Peter
Robert Livingston, Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792), Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), James
Livingston, Philip
Van Cortlandt, Henry
Brockholst Livingston, Peter
Samuel Schuyler, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., Edward
Livingston, Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler and James
Parker. |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Schuyler
family of Albany, New York (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page — Wikipedia article — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
 |
Montgomery Schuyler Jr. (1877-1955) —
of Manhattan, New York
County, N.Y.
Born in Stamford, Fairfield
County, Conn., September
2, 1877.
Author;
U.S. Consul General in Bangkok, 1904-06; U.S. Minister to Ecuador, 1913; Salvador, 1921-25; served in the U.S. Army during World War I;
stockbroker;
banker.
Episcopalian.
Died November
1, 1955 (age 78 years, 60
days).
Interment at Green-Wood
Cemetery, Brooklyn, N.Y.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Katherine Beeckman (Livingston) Schuyler and Montgomery Schuyler;
married, August
22, 1906, to Edith Lawver; second great-grandson of Valentine
Brother; third great-grandson of Robert
Gilbert Livingston; third great-grandnephew of Henry
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 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 Hamilton
Fish and Philip
N. Schuyler; 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 Gilbert
Livingston Thompson, Nicholas
Fish and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936); third cousin thrice removed of Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Henry
Walter Livingston, Rensselaer
Westerlo, Peter
Augustus Jay, Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, William
Jay and Charles
Ludlow Livingston; fourth cousin of Jonathan
Mayhew Wainwright; fourth cousin once removed of Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991). |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also U.S. State Dept career summary — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|  | Image source: U.S. passport application
(1921) |
|
 |
Peter Augustus Jay (1877-1933) —
of Newport, Newport
County, R.I.
Born in Newport, Newport
County, R.I., August
23, 1877.
Foreign Service officer; U.S. Consul General in Cairo, 1909-13; U.S. Minister to Salvador, 1920-21; Romania, 1921-25; U.S. Ambassador to Argentina, 1925-26.
Episcopalian.
Died in Washington,
D.C., October
18, 1933 (age 56 years, 56
days).
Interment at Jay
Family Cemetery, Rye, N.Y.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Augustus Jay and Emily Astor (Kane) Jay; married, March
16, 1909, to Susan Alexander McCook; great-grandson of Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843) and Joseph
Pearson; great-grandnephew of William
Jay; second great-grandson of John
Jay and Matthew
Clarkson (1758-1825); second great-grandnephew of James
Jay, Frederick
Jay and Henry
Brockholst Livingston; third great-grandson of William
Livingston; third great-grandnephew of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston and Philip
Livingston; fourth great-grandson of Jacobus
Van Cortlandt; fourth great-grandnephew of Stephanus
Van Cortlandt, John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775) and Gilbert
Livingston; fifth great-grandson of Robert
Livingston the Elder, Anthony
Brockholls, Pieter
Van Brugh and Phillip
French; fifth great-grandnephew of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724), Johannes
Cuyler and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); first cousin twice removed of John
Jay II; first cousin four times removed of Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston and Philip
Peter Livingston; first cousin five times removed of Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775) and Matthew
Clarkson (1733-1800); first cousin six times removed of Robert
Livingston the Younger, Cornelis
Cuyler, Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746) and John
Cruger Jr.; first cousin seven times removed of David
Davidse Schuyler and Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler; second cousin twice removed of Henry
Brockholst Ledyard; second cousin thrice removed of Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Henry
Walter Livingston, Rensselaer
Westerlo, Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873); second cousin four times removed
of Stephanus
Bayard, Pierre
Van Cortlandt, Philip
John Schuyler, Stephen
John Schuyler, Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), Philip
Van Cortlandt, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr. and Edward
Livingston (1764-1836); second cousin five times removed of Henry
Cruger; third cousin once removed of Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870); third cousin twice removed of Philip
Schuyler, Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Edward
Livingston (1796-1840), William
Duer, Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer and Denning
Duer; third cousin thrice removed of Volkert
Petrus Douw, Nicholas
Bayard, Philip
P. Schuyler, Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Hendrick
Kiliaen Van Rensselaer, Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792), Killian
Killian Van Rensselaer, Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler, James
Parker and Hamilton
Fish; fourth cousin of Brockholst
Livingston; fourth cousin once removed of Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer, Nicholas
Fish, Hamilton
Fish Jr., John
Kean and Hamilton
Fish Kean. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also Wikipedia article — U.S. State Dept career summary — Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|  | Image source: Library of
Congress |
|
|
Frederick Madison Roberts (1879-1952) —
also known as Frederick M. Roberts; Fred
Roberts —
of Los Angeles, Los
Angeles County, Calif.
Born in Chillicothe, Ross
County, Ohio, September
14, 1879.
Republican. Mortician;
member of California
state assembly, 1919-34; defeated, 1934; alternate delegate to
Republican National Convention from California, 1932,
1940,
1944,
1948;
candidate for U.S.
Representative from California 14th District, 1946.
African
Methodist Episcopal. African
ancestry. Member, NAACP; Urban
League.
First
African-American state legislator in California; descendancy from
Thomas Jefferson confirmed by DNA evidence in 1998.
Died, from injuries received in an automobile
accident the day before, in Los Angeles County General Hospital,
Los Angeles, Los Angeles
County, Calif., July 19,
1952 (age 72 years, 309
days).
Interment at Evergreen
Cemetery, Los Angeles, Calif.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Andrew Jackson Roberts and Ellen Wayles (Hemings) Roberts;
married, November
30, 1921, to Pearl W. Hinds; grandnephew of Martha
Jefferson Randolph; great-grandson of Thomas
Jefferson; third great-grandnephew of Richard
Randolph; first cousin once removed of Francis
Wayles Eppes, Benjamin
Franklin Randolph, Meriwether
Lewis Randolph and George
Wythe Randolph; first cousin twice removed of Dabney
Carr; first cousin four times removed of Richard
Bland and Peyton
Randolph (1721-1775); second cousin of Thomas
Jefferson Coolidge; second cousin once removed of Dabney
Smith Carr and John
Gardner Coolidge; second cousin thrice removed of Theodorick
Bland, Edmund
Jenings Randolph, Beverley
Randolph and John
Randolph of Roanoke; third cousin once removed of John
Jordan Crittenden, Thomas
Turpin Crittenden, Robert
Crittenden, Carter
Henry Harrison, John
Breckinridge Castleman and Edith
Wilson; third cousin twice removed of John
Marshall, Henry
Lee, Charles
Lee, Richard
Bland Lee, James
Markham Marshall, Thomas
Mann Randolph Jr., Alexander
Keith Marshall, Edmund
Jennings Lee, Peyton
Randolph (1779-1828) and Henry
St. George Tucker; fourth cousin of Alexander
Parker Crittenden, Thomas
Leonidas Crittenden, Thomas
Theodore Crittenden, Archelaus
Marius Woodson and Carter
Henry Harrison II; fourth cousin once removed of Thomas
Marshall, James
Keith Marshall, Nathaniel
Beverly Tucker, Edmund
Randolph and Thomas
Theodore Crittenden Jr.. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|
|
Helen Roosevelt Robinson (1881-1962) —
also known as Helen Rebecca Roosevelt —
of Mohawk, Herkimer
County, N.Y.
Born in New York, New York
County, N.Y., September
26, 1881.
Republican. Alternate delegate to Republican National Convention from
New York, 1940.
Female.
Died in Manhattan, New York
County, N.Y., July 8,
1962 (age 80 years, 285
days).
Interment at Robinson
Cemetery, Warren town, Herkimer County, N.Y.
|  |
Relatives:
Daughter of James Roosevelt Roosevelt and Helen Schermerhorn (Astor)
Robinson; married 1904 to Theodore
Douglas Robinson; half-niece of Franklin
Delano Roosevelt; grandniece of John
Jacob Astor III; second great-granddaughter of John
Armstrong Jr.; second great-grandniece of Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), James
Armstrong and Edward
Livingston; third great-granddaughter of John
Armstrong and Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775); fourth great-granddaughter of Robert
Livingston (1688-1775); fourth great-grandniece of John
Livingston, Gilbert
Livingston and Jabez
Huntington; fifth great-granddaughter of Robert
Livingston the Elder and Robert
Livingston the Younger; fifth great-grandniece of Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); sixth great-granddaughter of Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724); half-first cousin of Franklin
Delano Roosevelt Jr.; first cousin of James
Roosevelt and Elliott
Roosevelt; first cousin once removed of William
Waldorf Astor; first cousin thrice removed of Elizabeth
Monroe; first cousin five times removed of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Philip
Livingston, William
Livingston, Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Robert
Van Rensselaer, Jedediah
Huntington, James
Livingston and Ebenezer
Huntington; first cousin six times removed of Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746) and Philip
P. Schuyler; first cousin seven times removed of David
Davidse Schuyler, Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler and Benjamin
Huntington; second cousin of William
Astor Chanler and Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler; second cousin twice removed of Samuel
Laurence Gouverneur; second cousin four times removed of Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, Philip
Van Cortlandt, Henry
Brockholst Livingston, Nicholas
Roosevelt Jr., Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler, Maturin
Livingston and Jabez
Williams Huntington; second cousin five times removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Pierre
Van Cortlandt, Philip
John Schuyler, Stephen
John Schuyler, Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792) and Peter
Samuel Schuyler; third cousin of Francis
Holden Aspinwall; third cousin thrice removed of Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Henry
Walter Livingston, Philip
DePeyster, Peter
Augustus Jay, Rensselaer
Westerlo, Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, Philip
Schuyler, James
Alexander Hamilton, Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), William
Jay, James
I. Roosevelt, Gerrit
Smith, Charles
Ludlow Livingston, Hamilton
Fish and Elizabeth
Cady Stanton; fourth cousin of Peter
Goelet Gerry, Ogden
Livingston Mills and Robert
Reginald Livingston. |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Roosevelt
family of New York City, New York (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | Epitaph: "To live in the hearts / Of
those we love / Is not to die." |
|  | See also Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
 |
Robert Reginald Livingston (1888-1962) —
also known as Robert R. Livingston —
of Clermont, Columbia
County, N.Y.
Born in Clermont, Columbia
County, N.Y., August
4, 1888.
Democrat. Fruit
farmer;
served in the U.S. Army during World War I; member of New York
state assembly from Columbia County, 1923; defeated, 1920, 1921,
1923, 1924, 1925; candidate for U.S.
Representative from New York 27th District, 1928; alternate
delegate to Democratic National Convention from New York, 1932;
chair
of Columbia County Democratic Party, 1953.
Died in Hudson, Columbia
County, N.Y., November
7, 1962 (age 74 years, 95
days).
Burial location unknown.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Robert Reginald Livingston (1858-1899) and Mary (Tailer)
Livingston; married, February
23, 1922, to Alice Delafield Dean; married, March 3,
1945, to Dorothy Champion Farrar Hutton; great-grandson of Edward
Philip Livingston; second great-grandson of Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813); second great-grandnephew of John
Stevens III and Edward
Livingston (1764-1836); third great-grandson of John
Stevens, Philip
Livingston and Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775); third great-grandnephew of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Peter
Van Brugh Livingston and William
Livingston; fourth great-grandson of Dirck
Ten Broeck, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775) and James
Alexander; fourth great-grandnephew of John
Livingston and Gilbert
Livingston; fifth great-grandson of Robert
Livingston the Elder, Robert
Livingston the Younger and Pieter
Van Brugh; fifth great-grandnephew of Abraham
de Peyster, Johannes
Cuyler, Johannes
de Peyster and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); sixth great-grandson of Dirck
Wesselse Ten Broeck and Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724); first cousin twice removed of Edward
Livingston (1796-1840); first cousin thrice removed of Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer and Rensselaer
Westerlo; first cousin four times removed of Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, Philip
Peter Livingston, James
Livingston and Henry
Brockholst Livingston; first cousin five times removed of Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer and Robert
Van Rensselaer; first cousin six times removed of Johannes
DePeyster, Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746), Cornelis
Cuyler, John
Cruger Jr. and Philip
P. Schuyler; first cousin seven times removed of David
Davidse Schuyler and Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler; second cousin twice removed of Philip
Schuyler, Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer and John
Jacob Astor III; second cousin thrice removed of Henry
Walter Livingston, Peter
Augustus Jay, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, William
Jay and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873); second cousin four times removed
of Philip
Van Cortlandt, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., Peter
Robert Livingston (1766-1847), Jacob
Rutsen Van Rensselaer, Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler and Maturin
Livingston; second cousin five times removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Pierre
Van Cortlandt, Philip
John Schuyler, Matthew
Clarkson, Stephen
John Schuyler, Henry
Cruger, Henry
Rutgers, Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792) and Peter
Samuel Schuyler; third cousin once removed of Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer and William
Waldorf Astor; third cousin twice removed of Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Gerrit
Smith, William
Duer, Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard, Elizabeth
Cady Stanton and John
Jay II; third cousin thrice removed of James
Alexander Hamilton, Peter
Gansevoort and Hamilton
Fish; fourth cousin of William
Astor Chanler, Lewis
Stuyvesant Chanler, Peter
Goelet Gerry, Helen
Roosevelt Robinson and Ogden
Livingston Mills; fourth cousin once removed of Nicholas
Fish, Hamilton
Fish Jr., John
Kean, Hamilton
Fish Kean, Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870) and John
Eliot Thayer Jr.. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | Image source: U.S. passport application
(1921) |
|
|
Marion Richard Schuyler (1891-1961) —
also known as Marion R. Schuyler —
of Fonda, Montgomery
County, N.Y.; Naples, Ontario
County, N.Y.
Born in Fonda, Montgomery
County, N.Y., December
8, 1891.
Democrat. Served in the U.S. Army during World War I; candidate for
New
York state assembly from Montgomery County, 1920; hotel
proprietor; chair of
Ontario County Democratic Party, 1939-42; delegate to Democratic
National Convention from New York, 1940
(alternate), 1944.
Died in Naples, Ontario
County, N.Y., January
5, 1961 (age 69 years, 28
days).
Interment at Rose
Ridge Cemetery, Naples, N.Y.
|
 |
Laurens M. Hamilton —
of Sterlington, Rockland
County, N.Y.
Republican. Active in journalism
and banking;
candidate for New York
state senate 24th District, 1932; member of New York
state assembly from Rockland County, 1934-37; member of New York
Republican State Committee, 1936.
Burial location unknown.
|
|
Robert Winthrop Kean (1893-1980) —
also known as Robert W. Kean —
of Livingston, Essex
County, N.J.
Born in Elberon, Monmouth
County, N.J., September
28, 1893.
Republican. Served in the U.S. Army on the Mexican border; served in
the U.S. Army during World War I; banker;
elected (Wet) delegate
to New Jersey convention to ratify 21st amendment from Essex
County 1933; delegate to Republican National Convention from New
Jersey, 1936,
1960
(member, Resolutions
Committee), 1964;
U.S.
Representative from New Jersey 12th District, 1939-59; candidate
for U.S.
Senator from New Jersey, 1958; chair of
Essex County Republican Party, 1961.
Episcopalian.
Member, American
Legion; Veterans of
Foreign Wars.
Died September
21, 1980 (age 86 years, 359
days).
Interment at St.
Bernard's Cemetery, Bernardsville, N.J.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Hamilton
Fish Kean and Katharine Taylor (Winthrop) Kean; married, October
18, 1920, to Elizabeth Stuyvesant Howard; father of Thomas
Howard Kean; nephew of John
Kean (1852-1914); grandfather of Thomas
Howard Kean Jr.; second great-grandson of John
Kean (1756-1795); second great-grandnephew of Philip
Peter Livingston; third great-grandson of Peter
Van Brugh Livingston; third great-grandnephew of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Philip
Livingston and William
Livingston; fourth great-grandson of James
Alexander; fourth great-grandnephew of John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775) and Gilbert
Livingston; fifth great-grandson of Robert
Livingston the Elder and Pieter
Van Brugh; fifth great-grandnephew of Pieter
Schuyler, Abraham
de Peyster, Johannes
Cuyler, Johannes
de Peyster and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); first cousin once removed of Nicholas
Fish and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936); first cousin thrice removed of Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873); first cousin four times removed of
Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, John
Stevens III and Henry
Brockholst Livingston; first cousin five times removed of Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston and Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775); first cousin six times removed of Robert
Livingston the Younger, Johannes
DePeyster, Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746), Cornelis
Cuyler and John
Cruger Jr.; first cousin seven times removed of David
Davidse Schuyler and Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler; second cousin of Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991); second cousin once removed of Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996); second cousin twice removed of Hamilton
Fish (born 1951) and Alexa
Fish Ward; second 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 and William
Jay; second cousin four times removed of Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), Philip
Van Cortlandt, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr. and Edward
Livingston (1764-1836); second cousin five times removed of Stephanus
Bayard, Pierre
Van Cortlandt, Philip
John Schuyler, Matthew
Clarkson, Philip
P. Schuyler, Stephen
John Schuyler, Henry
Cruger and Henry
Rutgers; third cousin twice removed of Philip
Schuyler, Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Edward
Livingston (1796-1840), William
Duer, Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer, Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard and John
Jay II; third cousin thrice removed of Hamilton
Fish (1808-1893); fourth cousin once removed of Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870). |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Chapin-Fish
family of New York City, New York; Kean
family of New Jersey (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also congressional
biography — Govtrack.us
page |
|
|
Helen Huntington Hull (1893-1976) —
also known as Helen Dinsmore Huntington; Helen Huntington
Astor; Mrs. Lytle Hull —
of Rhinebeck, Dutchess
County, N.Y.
Born in New York, New York
County, N.Y., April 9,
1893.
Republican. Philanthropist; benefactor of musical institutions in New
York and the Hudson Valley; alternate delegate to Republican National
Convention from New York, 1924.
Female.
Episcopalian.
Bisexual.
Died in Manhattan, New York
County, N.Y., December
11, 1976 (age 83 years, 246
days).
Interment at Sleepy
Hollow Cemetery, Sleepy Hollow, N.Y.
|
|
William Henry Harrison (1896-1990) —
also known as William H. Harrison —
of Indianapolis, Marion
County, Ind.; Sheridan, Sheridan
County, Wyo.
Born in Terre Haute, Vigo
County, Ind., August
10, 1896.
Republican. Served in the U.S. Army during World War I; lawyer;
member of Indiana
state house of representatives, 1927-29; member of Wyoming
state house of representatives, 1945-50; member of Wyoming
Republican State Committee, 1946-48; U.S.
Representative from Wyoming at-large, 1951-55, 1961-65, 1967-69;
defeated, 1964, 1968; candidate for U.S.
Senator from Wyoming, 1954.
Member, Jaycees;
American
Legion; Sigma
Chi; Sigma
Delta Kappa; Freemasons;
Shriners;
Rotary.
Died in St. Petersburg, Pinellas
County, Fla., October
8, 1990 (age 94 years, 59
days).
Interment at Sheridan
Municipal Cemetery, Sheridan, Wyo.
|
|
Brockholst Livingston (1905-1952) —
of Oakmont, Allegheny
County, Pa.
Born in Pennsylvania, January
25, 1905.
U.S. Vice Consul in Baghdad, as of 1932.
Died July 25,
1952 (age 47 years, 182
days).
Interment at Arlington
National Cemetery, Arlington, Va.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Mary (Keating) Livingston and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (born 1870); second great-grandson of Henry
Brockholst Livingston and Henry
Walter Livingston; third great-grandson of William
Livingston and Walter
Livingston; third great-grandnephew of Peter
Van Brugh Livingston, Philip
Livingston, Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794) and Pieter
Schuyler (1746-1792); fourth great-grandson of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790); fourth great-grandnephew of John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775), Gilbert
Livingston, Philip
John Schuyler, Philip
P. Schuyler and Stephen
John Schuyler; fifth great-grandson of Robert
Livingston the Elder, Anthony
Brockholls, Pieter
Van Brugh, Phillip
French and Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746); fifth great-grandnephew of Johannes
Cuyler; sixth great-grandson of Stephanus
Van Cortlandt, Pieter
Schuyler (1657-1724) and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); sixth great-grandnephew of Jacobus
Van Cortlandt; first cousin twice removed of Henry
Brockholst Ledyard; first cousin thrice removed of Peter
Augustus Jay (1776-1843), William
Jay and Edward
Livingston (1796-1840); first cousin four times removed of Philip
Peter Livingston and Matthew
Clarkson; first cousin five times removed of Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston, Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775), Peter
Samuel Schuyler and Philip
Jeremiah Schuyler; first cousin six times removed of Robert
Livingston the Younger, Cornelis
Cuyler, Stephanus
Bayard, John
Cruger Jr. and Pierre
Van Cortlandt; first cousin seven times removed of David
Davidse Schuyler and Myndert
Davidtse Schuyler; second cousin twice removed of John
Jay II; second cousin thrice removed of Stephen
Van Rensselaer, Philip
Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Rensselaer
Westerlo, Edward
Philip Livingston, William
Alexander Duer, John
Duer, Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859) and Charles
Ludlow Livingston (1800-1873); second cousin four times removed
of Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), Philip
Van Cortlandt, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr., Edward
Livingston (1764-1836), Philip
Schuyler and James
Alexander Hamilton; second cousin five times removed of James
Jay, Nicholas
Bayard, Jeremiah
Van Rensselaer, Henry
Cruger, Robert
Van Rensselaer, John
Jay, Frederick
Jay, James
Livingston and James
Parker; third cousin once removed of Bronson
Murray Cutting; third cousin twice removed of William
Duer, Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer and Denning
Duer; third cousin thrice removed of Hamilton
Fish; fourth cousin of Peter
Augustus Jay (1877-1933); fourth cousin once removed of Kiliaen
Van Rensselaer, Nicholas
Fish, Hamilton
Fish Jr., John
Kean, Hamilton
Fish Kean and Herbert
Livingston Satterlee. |
|  | Political family: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York (subset of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also Find-A-Grave
memorial |
|
|
Thomas Francis Bayard III (1911-1992) —
also known as Thomas F. Bayard III —
of New
Castle County, Del.
Born in Wilmington, New Castle
County, Del., December
31, 1911.
Democrat. Candidate for Delaware
state house of representatives from New Castle County 7th
District, 1956.
Died in Palm Beach, Palm Beach
County, Fla., February
9, 1992 (age 80 years, 40
days).
Interment at Old
Swedes Church Cemetery, Wilmington, Del.
|
|
Alexis Irenee du Pont Bayard (1918-1985) —
also known as Alexis I. du Pont Bayard —
of Rockland, New Castle
County, Del.; Wilmington, New Castle
County, Del.
Born in Wilmington, New Castle
County, Del., February
11, 1918.
Democrat. Served in the U.S. Marine Corps during World War II; lawyer;
delegate to Democratic National Convention from Delaware, 1948
(alternate; member, Credentials
Committee), 1952
(member, Committee
on Rules and Order of Business), 1960,
1968;
Lieutenant
Governor of Delaware, 1949-53; Democratic candidate for
Presidential Elector for Delaware, 1972.
Episcopalian.
Member, American Bar
Association; American
Judicature Society; American
Academy of Political and Social Science; American
Legion; Veterans of
Foreign Wars; Jaycees.
Died in Wilmington, New Castle
County, Del., September
3, 1985 (age 67 years, 204
days).
Interment at Old
Swedes Church Cemetery, Wilmington, Del.
|
|
Thomas Howard Kean (b. 1935) —
also known as Thomas H. Kean; Tom Kean —
of Livingston, Essex
County, N.J.; Far Hills, Somerset
County, N.J.
Born in New York City (unknown
county), N.Y., April
21, 1935.
Republican. Member of New
Jersey state house of assembly, 1968-77 (District 11-F 1968-71,
District 11-E 1972-73, 25th District 1974-77); delegate to Republican
National Convention from New Jersey, 1968
(alternate), 2008,
2012;
Governor
of New Jersey, 1982-90; defeated in primary, 1977.
Episcopalian.
Still living as of 2014.
|  |
Relatives: Son
of Robert
Winthrop Kean; father of Thomas
Howard Kean Jr.; grandson of Hamilton
Fish Kean; grandnephew of John
Kean (1852-1914); third great-grandson of John
Kean (1756-1795); third great-grandnephew of Philip
Peter Livingston; fourth great-grandson of Peter
Van Brugh Livingston; fourth great-grandnephew of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Philip
Livingston and William
Livingston; fifth great-grandson of James
Alexander; fifth great-grandnephew of John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775) and Gilbert
Livingston; sixth great-grandson of Robert
Livingston the Elder and Pieter
Van Brugh; sixth great-grandnephew of Pieter
Schuyler, Abraham
de Peyster, Johannes
Cuyler, Johannes
de Peyster and Johannes
Schuyler (1668-1747); first cousin twice removed of Nicholas
Fish and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936); first cousin four times removed of Charles
Ludlow Livingston; first cousin five times removed of Peter
Robert Livingston (1737-1794), Walter
Livingston, John
Stevens III and Henry
Brockholst Livingston; first cousin six times removed of Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston and Robert
R. Livingston (1718-1775); first cousin seven times removed of Robert
Livingston the Younger, Johannes
DePeyster, Johannes
Schuyler (1697-1746), Cornelis
Cuyler and John
Cruger Jr.; second cousin once removed of Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991); second cousin four times 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 and William
Jay; second cousin five times removed of Robert
R. Livingston (1746-1813), Philip
Van Cortlandt, Pierre
Van Cortlandt Jr. and Edward
Livingston (1764-1836); third cousin of Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996); third cousin once removed of Hamilton
Fish and Alexa
Fish Ward; third cousin thrice removed of Philip
Schuyler, Peter
Robert Livingston (1789-1859), Edward
Livingston (1796-1840), William
Duer, Henry
Bell Van Rensselaer, Denning
Duer, Henry
Brockholst Ledyard and John
Jay II. |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Kean
family of New Jersey (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | Cross-reference: Bob
Franks — Deborah
T. Poritz |
|  | See also National Governors
Association biography — Wikipedia
article — NNDB
dossier |
|  | Books by Thomas H. Kean: Politics
of Inclusion (1988) |
|
|
Richard Henry Bayard (born c.1949) —
also known as Richard Bayard —
of Wilmington, New Castle
County, Del.
Born about 1949.
Democrat. Aide to Sen. Edmund
S. Muskie, 1972-76; lawyer;
member of Democratic
National Committee from Delaware, 1988-97, 2004; delegate to
Democratic National Convention from Delaware, 1992,
1996,
2000,
2004;
Delaware
Democratic state chair, 1997.
Still living as of 2004.
|
|
Thomas Howard Kean Jr. (b. 1968) —
also known as Tom Kean, Jr. —
of Westfield, Union
County, N.J.
Born September
5, 1968.
Republican. Aide to U.S. Rep. Bob
Franks; member of New
Jersey state house of assembly, 2001-03; member of New
Jersey state senate 21st District, 2003-; candidate for U.S.
Senator from New Jersey, 2006; delegate to Republican National
Convention from New Jersey, 2008.
Still living as of 2014.
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Relatives: Son
of Thomas
Howard Kean; grandson of Robert
Winthrop Kean; great-grandson of Hamilton
Fish Kean; great-grandnephew of John
Kean (1852-1914); fourth great-grandson of John
Kean (1756-1795); fourth great-grandnephew of Philip
Peter Livingston; fifth great-grandson of Peter
Van Brugh Livingston; fifth great-grandnephew of Robert
Livingston (1708-1790), Philip
Livingston and William
Livingston; sixth great-grandson of James
Alexander; sixth great-grandnephew of John
Livingston, Robert
Livingston (1688-1775) and Gilbert
Livingston; seventh great-grandson of Robert
Livingston the Elder and Pieter
Van Brugh; seventh great-grandnephew of Pieter
Schuyler, Abraham
de Peyster, Johannes
Cuyler, Johannes
de Peyster and Johannes
Schuyler; first cousin thrice removed of Nicholas
Fish and Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1849-1936); first cousin five times removed of Charles
Ludlow Livingston; first cousin six times removed of Peter
Robert Livingston, Walter
Livingston, John
Stevens III and Henry
Brockholst Livingston; first cousin seven times removed of Robert
Gilbert Livingston, Henry
Gilbert Livingston and Robert
R. Livingston; second cousin twice removed of Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1888-1991); second cousin five times 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 and William
Jay; third cousin once removed of Hamilton
Fish Jr. (1926-1996); fourth cousin of Hamilton
Fish and Alexa
Fish Ward. |
|  | Political families: Livingston-Schuyler
family of New York; Kean
family of New Jersey (subsets of the Four
Thousand Related Politicians). |
|  | See also Wikipedia
article — NNDB
dossier |
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