Mary Elizabeth Woodbury

The New Netherland Ancestors of

MARY ELIZABETH WOODBURY,

the wife of MONTOMERY BLAIR



- for Montgomery Blair

Cabinet Official (Postmaster General), House of Representatives, State House





       __LEVI WOODBURY1,6
      |
MARY ELIZABETH WOODBURY1
the wife of MONTOMERY BLAIR
      |
      |     __ASA CLAPP1,6
      |    |
      |__Elizabeth Wendell Clapp1,6
	   |
	   |                    __Edmund Quincy1
	   |                   |
	   |               __Edmund Quincy1,3
	   |              |    |
	   |              |    |__Elizabeth Gookin1
	   |              |
	   |          __Edmund Quincy1,4,9
	   |         |    |
	   |         |    |     __Josiah Flynt2
	   |         |    |    |
	   |         |    |__Dorothy Flynt1,3
	   |         |         |
	   |         |         |     __Thomas Willet2
	   |         |         |    |
	   |         |         |__Esther Willet2
	   |         |              |
	   |         |              |__Mary Brown2
	   |         |
	   |     __Jacob Quincy1,5
	   |    |    |
	   |    |    |               __Evert Janszen Wendell1,4,8
	   |    |    |              |
	   |    |    |          __Johannes Wendell1,4,7,8
	   |    |    |         |    |
	   |    |    |         |    |     __Philippe Du Trieux1,8
	   |    |    |         |    |    |
	   |    |    |         |    |__Susanna Du Trieux1,4,8
	   |    |    |         |         |
	   |    |    |         |         |__Susanna du Chesne1,8
	   |    |    |         |
	   |    |    |     __Abraham Wendell1,4,8,9
	   |    |    |    |    |
	   |    |    |    |    |     __Abraham Staats7
	   |    |    |    |    |    |
	   |    |    |    |    |__Elizabeth Staats1,4,7,8
	   |    |    |    |         |
	   |    |    |    |         |     __Jochem Wesselszen7
	   |    |    |    |         |    |
	   |    |    |    |         |__Tryntje Jochemse7
	   |    |    |    |              |
	   |    |    |    |              |__Geertruy Hieronimus7
	   |    |    |    |
	   |    |    |__Elizabeth Wendell1,4,9
	   |    |         |
	   |    |         |          __Jacob Theuniszen DeKay9,11
	   |    |         |         |
	   |    |         |     __Teunis DeKay1,4,9
	   |    |         |    |    |
	   |    |         |    |    |     __Theunis Thomaszen [Quick]9,10
	   |    |         |    |    |    |
	   |    |         |    |    |__Hillegonde Quick9,11
	   |    |         |    |         |
	   |    |         |    |         |__Belitje Jacobs9,10
	   |    |         |    |
	   |    |         |__Catharina DeKay1,4,8,9
	   |    |              |
	   |    |              |     __Johannes Pieterszen Van Brugh1,9
	   |    |              |    |
	   |    |              |__Helena Van Brugh1,4,9
	   |    |                   |
	   |    |                   |     __Roelof Jansen1,12
	   |    |                   |    |
	   |    |                   |__Tryntje Roelofs1,9
	   |    |                        |
	   |    |                        |     __(Jan or Johan) (__)12
	   |    |                        |    |
	   |    |                        |__Anneke Jans1,12
	   |    |                             |
	   |    |                             |__Tryntje Roelofs12,13
	   |    |
	   |__Elizabeth Wendell Quincy1,6
		|
		|     __John Williams5
		|    |
		|__Elizabeth Williams1,5
		     |
		     |__Mary Pope5


Look at the code for this diagram.
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Biography of MONTOMERY BLAIR

 
BLAIR, Montgomery, statesman, born in Franklin County, Kentucky, 10 May 1813; died in Silver Spring, Maryland, 27 July 1883. He was a son of Francis P. Blair, Sr., was graduated at West Point in 1835, and, after serving in the Seminole War, resigned his commission on 20 May 1836. He then studied law, and, after his admission to the bar in 1839, began practice in St. Louis. He was appointed United States district attorney for Missouri, and in 1842 was elected Mayor of St. Louis. He was raised to the bench as judge of the court of common pleas in 1843, but resigned in 1849. He removed to Maryland in 1852, and in 1855 was appointed United States solicitor in the court of claims. He was removed from this office by President Buchanan in 1858, having left the Democratic Party on the repeal of the Missouri Compromise. In 1857 he acted as counsel for the plaintiff in the celebrated Dred Scott case. He presided over the Maryland republican convention in 1860, and in 1861 was appointed Postmaster-General by President Lincoln. It is said that he alone of Mr. Lincoln's cabinet opposed the surrender of Fort Sumter, and held his resignation upon the issue. As Postmaster-General he prohibited the sending of disloyal papers through the mails, and introduced various reforms, such as money-orders, free delivery in cities, and postal railroad cars. In 1864 Mr. Blair, who was not altogether in accord with the policy of the administration, told the president that he would resign whenever the latter thought it necessary, and on 23 September Mr. Lincoln, in a friendly letter, accepted his offer. After this Mr. Blair acted with the Democratic Party, and in 1876-1877 vigorously attacked Mr. Hayes's title to the office of president.
 

 


Notes and Sources


   1.  Roberts, Gary Boyd, Notable Kin, Volume Two, Santa Clarita:  Carl
       Boyer, 3rd, 1999.  156-165.  This chapter (45) entitled "Hollywood
       Gothic" and the Alabama Three was authored by John Anderson Brayton.
   2.  Flint, Edward F., S.M., and Gwendolyn S. Flint, Flint Family History of
       The Adventuresome Seven, Volume II.  Baltimore:  Gateway Press, Inc.,
       1984.  569-571.
   3.  Ibid., p. 578-579.
   4.  Ibid., p. 604-606.
   5.  Ibid., p. 651.
   6.  Ibid., p. 714.
   7.  Pearson, Jonathan, Contributions for the Genealogies of the First
       Settlers of the Ancient County of Albany, from 1630 to 1800.  Albany:
       Joel Munsell, 1872.  150.
   8.  Randolph, Howard, S.R., "The House of Truax," The New York Genealogical
       and Biographical Record, 57 (1926):  208-219, 336-344; 58 (1927):  76-81,
       111-116, 267-272, 326-331; 59 (1928):  17-26, 182-190, 289-293, 386-395.
   9.  McCracken, George E., "The American Dekay Family," The American
       Genealogist, 33 (1957):  223-231; 34 (1958):  29-38.
  10.  Quick, Arthur Craig, A Genealogy of the Quick Family in America (1625-
       1942) 317 Years.  South Haven: A.C. Quick, 1942.  3-8.
  11.  Ibid., p. 12-14.
  12.  Bogardus, William Brouwer.  Dear "Cousin:"  A Charted Genealogy of the
       Descendants of Anneke Jans Bogardus (1605-1663) to the 5th Generation
       - and of her sister Marritje Jans.  Wilmington:  Anneke Jans and
       Everardus Bogardus Descendants Association, 1996.  Chart No. 1.
  13.  She is more commonly known as Tryntje Jonas.


 

First uploaded 29 April 2002

Last Modified  Saturday, 08-Sep-2018 18:03:15 MDT

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