Individual Page


Family
Marriage: Children:
  1. Helen S Wood: Birth: MAR 1834 in , Cortland, NY. Death: 26 JAN 1906 in , Saginaw, MI

  2. William Alonzo Wood: Birth: ABT 1836 in Broome Co, NY. Death: 01 DEC 1876 in Chesaning, Saginaw, MI

  3. Amelia A Wood: Birth: 27 APR 1840 in Cortland Co, NY. Death: 27 OCT 1897 in Lansing, Ingham, MI

  4. Maria N Wood: Birth: ABT 1842 in Cortland Co, NY. Death: AFT 1905 in Chesaning, Saginaw, MI

  5. John James Wood: Birth: 20 OCT 1842 in Cortland Co, NY. Death: 01 JAN 1909 in Lansing, Ingham, MI

  6. Daniel C Wood: Birth: NOV 1844 in Cortland Co, NY. Death: 23 MAR 1903 in Milwaukee, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA

  7. Charles Henry Wood: Birth: 19 SEP 1848 in Niles, Cayuga, New York, USA. Death: 22 OCT 1916 in Benzonia, Benzie, Michigan, USA

  8. George Edward Wood: Birth: 12 MAY 1851 in Groton, Cayuga, NY. Death: 23 FEB 1892 in Chesaning, Saginaw, MI

  9. Nellie Wood: Birth: ABT 1855 in Detroit, MI. Death: AFT 19 FEB 1886

  10. Franklin M Wood: Birth: 17 SEP 1857 in Lansing, Ingham, Michigan, USA. Death: 17 SEP 1857 in Chesaning, Saginaw, MI


Sources
1. Title:   Web: Michigan, Find A Grave Index, 1805-2011
Publication:   Name: Ancestry.com. Web: Michigan, Find A Grave Index, 1805-2011 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2012.;
2. Title:   Ancestry Family Trees
Page:   Ancestry Family Tree
Publication:   Name: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members.;

Notes
a. Note:   Angeline was born 11 Nov 1810 courtland Ny and died 12 Mar 1878. Her parents were Judge William Mallory and Mitty Sperry. Please note: Johannas A Freer (John Anthony Freer). His daughter Marya 7 dec 1795 rochester NY married Lyman Mallory b 1794 and had Elias Dupuy Mallory in Ulster Kingston NY. elias Mallory was manager of the Taylor Opera House in Courtland in 1889....anyone know who Lyman Mallory parents are? Meanwhile: Here are Angeline's parents: (5) Judge William Mallery 12 Nov 1774 Hillsdale Columbia Co NY 2nd sheriff of Courtland appoint 1809 co NY d 17 Apr 1837 Cortland, Cortland Co. NY = 7 Jun 1807 Homer, Cortland, NY Mitty Sperry 1 Dec 1788 Woodbidge New Haven Ct d 8 Feb 1869 Cortland NY (Elijah Sperry 25 Apr 1750 Woodbridge d 12 Apr 1832 = Deborah Tolles 27 Jul 1751 Woodbridge) ( (Samuel Mallory on 1840 Census of Homer, Courtland, NY) (James Sperry Jr 26 Oct 1718 = mary Sperry) HISTORY OF THE TOWN OF CORTLANDVILLE Part 2 William Mallory , already mentioned , moved into the village before 1815 , and became a prominent and influential citizen and politician. He built his residence on the site of the Squires block. On the same lot was a small building which served the purposes of county clerk's office until the old brick building was erected in1819. Mr. Mallory had a distillery a little west of the Rock Spring cheese factory. He was sheriff from 1800 to 1810 ; county clerk from 1815 to 1819 , and in 1823 was appointed judge of the Court of Common Pleas , succeeding Judge Keep…. … " Early residents occasionally return here from their distant homes in the West and look with delight upon the growth and beauty of Cortland. It possesses many natural advantages. To these were added the enterprise and energy of sagacious men. Quite early in its history advances began in its material prosperity and the cultivation of the morals of society. Although the date of its origin was about the year 1815 , scarcely a building of that period now remains of its original foundation. All have been taken down , all pushed aside , to be supplanted by loftier and more costly structures. The old yellow store , which stood for nearly forty years on the southeast corner of Main street , build and occupied by Wm. and Roswell Randall , the theatre of their fortunes , and once resonant with the voices of their far-famed clerks , Eleazer W. Edgcomb and Delos Moody , had to move from its position and take a place on a retired street. Jacob Wheeler's blacksmith shop has given place to the foundry , and the modest home of Daniel Laisdell , for years a furniture dealer , has been dismissed for the tasteful residence of Stephen Brewer. Luce's tavern has yielded the supremacy to the Messenger House. The squires block is upon the lot which for years was the cherished home of the Hon. William Mallory ; and upon the same lot was a small wooden building kept as a clerk's office as late as the summer of 1819. Nearly opposite these premises was the lot on which stood the residence and office of Oliver Wiswell. Judge Wiswell and Judge Stephens were law partners. It was the earliest law firm in the county and for years they stood at the head of the bar. But residence and office have gone into the past , and the grounds upon which they stood are now covered with beautiful flowers , which are suggestive of other things which are beautiful-of gentleness , faith and hope HISTORY OF THE TOWN OF CORTLANDVILLE In the year 1800 Wilmont Sperry located in the town , on lot 73 ; he was from Woodbridge , Conn. Two years later William Mallory came in from Columbia county and permanently located. He soon afterward built a house where the Keator block now stands , corner of Main and Port Watson streets. He was the second sheriff of the county , appointed in 1809 , and was a man of unusual character and acquirements. In 1814 he was elected to the Assembly and as county clerk in 1815. In 1819 he was elected to the State Senate , and was appointed county judge in 1823. He died in 1837. The first settlements within the present corporate limits of this village have already been referred to in the early pages of the history of the town. With the location and pioneer labors of such men as Jonathan Hubbard , Moses Hopkins , Obadiah Boies , William Mallory , David Merrick , Joshua Bassett , Oliver Wiswell , Henry Stephens , and scores of others to whom we shall herein refer , will forever be honorably associated the early growth and prosperity of Cortland ; and their noble example seems to have brought to life in the later days of unexampled advancement in the village the same qualities which inspired their hearts when the broad valley was forest-covered and the hill-tops echoed with the nightly howls of the wolf. Samuel Hotchkiss , also , settled in Cortland as early as 1815 and became a prominent citizen. He was made deputy clerk of the county by Wm. Mallory in 1815 , and held the office under him and two succeeding clerks , Joshua Ballard and Matthias Cook , until January 1st , 1823. The Cayuga Association of Universalists convened at the Baptist Church in Cortland June 7th and 8th , 1815. June 19th , 1829 , a meeting was held at the home of David Merrick , when a society was formed by the name of the " First Universalist Society of Homer "(Homer at that time comprised the present towns of Homer and Cortlandville). David Peck , Jacob Badgley and David Mallery were elected trustees , and Lewis Boies , clerk. Since 1833 the society has held regular annual meetings , electing its officers , etc. The present neat church-edifice was completed in 1837 , at a cost of about six thousand dollars. The hardware , stove and tinware business now conducted by Smith & Kingsbury at No. 12 North Main street was established in 1859 by E.D. Mallery , in the old Lyman building , corner of Main street and Groton avenue. This was the second tin and hardware store in the village , and was started on a very small scale , the storeroom now occupied by C.H. Gaylord's grocery being devoted to the sale of hardware , and having a small tin shop in the rear.The hardware , stove and tinware business now conducted by Smith & Kingsbury at No. 12 North Main street was established in 1859 by E.D. Mallery , in the old Lyman building , corner of Main street and Groton avenue. This was the second tin and hardware store in the village , and was started on a very small scale , the storeroom now occupied by C.H. Gaylord's grocery being devoted to the sale of hardware , and having a small tin shop in the rear. Soon after the business was established and during the same year (1859) , Mallery sold to the firm of Mills & Goodrich , who carried on the business four years , in 1863 or 1864 securing the frame building then standing on the corner of Main and Court streets (and which had been occupied many years as a seminary) , and removing it to the present site turned it into a hardware store and tin shop. In the year 1800 Wilmont Sperry located in the town , on lot 73 ; he was from Woodbridge , Conn. Two years later William Mallory came in from Columbia county and permanently located. He soon afterward built a house where the Keator block now stands , corner of Main and Port Watson streets. He was the second sheriff of the county , appointed in 1809 , and was a man of unusual character and acquirements. In 1814 he was elected to the Assembly and as county clerk in 1815. In 1819 he was elected to the State Senate , and was appointed county judge in 1823. He died in 1837. John A. Freer came into town at this time from Duchess county , and located on lot 74. He became a prominent citizen of the village , as did also his sons , Anthony and S.D. Freer , the latter of whom still lives there. Would love to have the info from the Bible...but not in a position to buy it. Here is Angeline's sister and descendants: (6) Samantha Mallory 16 Mar 1808 Homer, Cortland, NY d 1831 Homer Cortland NY =1830 NY Willis Hotchkiss 1807 NY (7) Flora E Hotchkiss 5 Jul 1837 Green Co NY = 26 Nov 1854 Simeon Pond 24 Nov 1830 Addison Steuben NY (William Pond 30 Nov 1795 Vt d 22 May 1863 WI bur Springfield Cem Marquette WI= Elvira Forbes) (Phineas Pond 9 May 1758 Vt d Apr 1846 bur State Road Cem = Rhoda Wood) (Dan Pond 4 Nov 1726 Branford Ct d 27 May 1783 Poultney Rutland Vt bur Stockbridge MA= Mabel Munson 27 Jul 1730 Wallingford ct) (Philip Pond 5 Jun 1706 Branford Ct (Philip was brother of Peter Pond who married mary hubbard) = Thankful Frisbie 9 Apr 1708 Branford Ct) (Samuel Pond 1 Jul 1679 Branford Ct d 1726 Guilford Ct= Abigail Goodrich 143 Nov 1685) (Samuel Pond 3 Mar 1648 = Miriam Blatchley) (Samuel Pond 1616 Groton England = Sarah Ware Jan 1616 Guilford ct) (Robert Pond 1592 Groton Suffok England d 1737 Dorchester Suffolk MA came Arabella 1630 Winthrop Fleet = 1609 England Mary margaret Hakins 1590) (William Pond = Judith Gordon) (John Ponder = Joan Burton) NOTE: Joan Burton was wife of Adam Winthrop and was great grandmother of Gov. John Winthrop) Simeon Pond, a retired lumber merchant of Westfield, is one of three brothers who have been identified with the growth and upbuilding of Marquette Co. since the days of its early history. He was born in Addison, Steuben Co., NY, on the 26th of November, 1830, and was reared to the occupation of farming, which he followed with good success until after the war. He came to Marquette Co. in 1855, making his first home in the town of Packwaukee, where he remained for 2 years, when he became a resident of the town of Springfield. Ten years afterward he removed to Montello and 9 years later made a permanent settlement in Westfield. Mr. Pond was married Nov. 26, 1854, his union being with Miss Flora E. Hotchkiss, of Packwaukee. Unto them were born the following children—Frederick Eugene, born April 8, 1856; Ida May, born July 17, 1858; Charles E., born Dec. 9, 1869; and Frank L., born Sept. 24, 1872. The eldest son was formerly the proprietor and popular editor of "Wildwoods Magazine" and is a writer of much merit, while the only daughter is the wife of Dr. P. E. Minckler of Westfield. Mrs. Pond was born July 5, 1837, in Green County, NY, and is a daughter of Willis and Samantha (Mallory) Hotchkiss. She is an estimable lady and like her husband is held in high regard. Mr. Pond was a faithful and gallant soldier in the War for the Union. On the 15th of August, 1862, he enlisted in Company A, 1st Wisconsin Heavy Artillery, and after serving faithfully with his command until the end of the war was honorably discharged June 26, 1865, and mustered out at Milwaukee on the 13th of July, following. His once robust constitution was much broken down by the exposures and hardships of army life and he has never fully regained his former health. Being unable to resume farming, Mr. Pond engaged in the lumber trade at Montello and later followed the same business in Westfield, but is now living a retired life. He has a pleasant home and comfortable competence as the result of his years of business industry and can spend his last days in the enjoyment of the fruits of his former toil. Portrait and Biographical Album of Green Lake, Marquette, and Waushara Counties (Wisconsin), 1890, pages 590-591 (8) Frederick Eugene Pond 8 Apr 1856 Packwaukie Marquette WI j;g; editor of Wildwood Magazine (8) Ida May Pond 17 Jul 1858 NY = Dr P E Minkler 1845 Quebec (9) Frank Minkler 1869 Mo (9) Alvin Minkler 1872 ME (9) Flora Minkler 1879 MN (8) Charles E Pond 9 Dec 1869 WI (8) Frank L Pond 24 Sep 1872 WI


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