
Lineage of the English Family Whitmore derives from: John, Lord of Whytemere, in the reign of Henry III, Edward I, was father of : Phillip De Whytemere, who died in 1300, and was S. by his son, :John De Whytemere, living in 1361, show son,: Richard De Whytemere, of Claverley and Whytemere, married Margery, daughter and heir of William Atteral, of Claverley, and dying about 1368, left a son and heir,: Richare De Whytemere, father of another,: Richard De Whytemere, who married a lady named Joan, but of what family is not ascertained, and was S. at his decease, in 1442, by his son,: Thomas Whytemere, of Claverley, she died 1483, his son,: Richard Whytemere, left at his demise in 1504, by his wife Agnes, who died 1522, a son and successor,: Richard Whitmore, of Claverley, born 1495, who married Frances Barker, and had 2 sons,: Wiliam his heir, Thomas, ancestor of the Whitmores of Ludstone, in Claverley. Richard Whitmore died 1549, and was S. by his son, : William Whitmore ESQ. of London, merchant, who married Anne, daughter of Alderman William Bond, of that city, and by her (who died Oct., 1615) had issue: William (Sir) his heir; Thomas, George (Sir) Knight of Balmes, in Hackney parish, Middlesex. He died Dec 12, 1654.
Thomas Whitmore 1615-1681, came to America in 1635 married Sarah Hall had son ,Izrahiah Wetmore 1656-1742 married Rachael Stow had son, Judge Seth Wetmore 1703-1778 married Hannah Edwards had son, Deacon Oliver Wetmore 1752-1798 married Sarah Brewster had son, Chauncey Edwards Wetmore 1790-1872 married Rebecca Hubbard had daughter, Harriet Wetmore 1823-1901 married John Wesley Jones had son, Walter Brewster Jones 1856-1939 married Annie Katharine Hall had daughter, Ruth 1900-1989 married Jacob Eugene Heintz had son, Walter George Heintz 1927- married Beatrice had son, Michael Heintz, married Patrica, have 3 sons Adam Brewster Heintz, Patrick Michael Heintz and Eric Walter Heintz.
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If you are interested on the Wetmore genealogy there is a book that can be ordered about Wetmore family. It is available from Higginsons Books and you can visit them on line by clicking on their name. The book was printed in 1861 and starts with Thomas Whitmore and his descendants. Over time I will be relaying some of the information found in this book in my Wetmore Facts.
Another place on the web to find Wetmore information is at http://www.genforum.com/wetmore/
You can visit my other genealogical web site on William Brewster by clicking on the name.
The Mormon Church is on line with their great genealogical records click on highlighted text.
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I have extensive information on the Wetmore family. I have visited the home of Judge Seth in Middletown CT. The Wetmore family is related to Aaron Burr, Jonathan Edwards, Benjamin Franklin, and Cotton Mather. Feel free to contact me if you are a relative.
This is the
carved newel post at the bottom of the stairway
This wall was originally paneled from floor to ceiling when the current owners took possession from the Wetmores. The sons of the owners found a hollow wall behind the panels and while the parents were vacationing they removed them.
Behind the
panels they found a fireplace with a dutch oven on each side. Inside the
fireplace they found a sword which belonged to a beau who died in the Mexican
war who customarily left his sword with his betrothed. In the dutch oven
they found some scalps which were well preserved in some kind of alcohol
mixture.
View of the Wetmore home
from the right side. The rooms added onto the back were servants quarters.
This house was used to hide runaway slaves. The underground railroad ran
here. Outside this side we can see where wells were. They held water about
5 feet deep. The slaves would hide in the water up to their noses when
people came to look for them. The wells are filled in now but one can see
the depressions in the earth where they were.
The brownstone chimney
here is an example of the architecture of the day. The house was built
in 1746 by Judge Seth Wetmore.
Here is some more history about the home:
Seth Wetmore, born in 1700 and the fifth son of Israiah Wetmore, followed
in his father’s footsteps in public service and the law. He did not
attend any college but was an educated man. He was first appointed
Tax Collector and Constable in 1733; then, Surveyor of the Highway in 1735
and in the 1740’s selectman and Moderator of the Town Meeting. He
also represented Middletown in several regional and intercolonial disputes.
He served as a Deputy of the General Court of Connecticut for forty-eight
terms from 1738 to 1771 as well as Magistrate of Middletown, Judge of the
County Court of Hartford County and, with Jabez Hamlin, Judge of the Quorum
of Hartford County 1761-1768.
During his lifetime, Middletown changed from a small community of farmers
into one of the wealthiest towns in Connecticut. The
Connecticut River had always been a highway that transported people and
goods to and from the interiors of Vermont, Massachusetts and Connecticut
and the rest of the world via Long Island Sound. Business districts
were beginning to form near the ports of all the river towns by the end
of the seventeenth century and shipbuilding had started in Middletown as
early as 1670. By 1713/14 Middletown already had two wharves and
ships operating from them. The ports provided an outlet for excess
crops grown in the rich soils left by the glacier north of Middletown.
Commercial farming developed rapidly and wheat, corn, tobacco and livestock
were shipped off to coastal cities and, later, as far as the West Indies.
Two schooners operated out of Middletown in 1730 but by 1770 fifteen ships
called this port home.
Most of the increase in the port’s business came from the local merchant’s
involvement in the triangular trade. Several Middletown men made
fortunes by working all three sides of the triangle; selling local products
to the West Indies and importing sugar. Rum, molasses and slaves while
at the same time accumulating credits with British merchants who wanted
access to markets in the interior.
This new wealth created a taste for luxury and the ability to pay for
it. The Middletown elite indulged themselves. Estate inventories
show large amounts of silver, mahogany furniture, vast wardrobes, expensive
clocks and items from the China trade.
The slave trade made a genteel life possible for these wealthy merchants
and most of them participated in it both by importing and owning slaves.
Slave ownership was common but few had more than one. The 1756 census
listed a white population of 5664 and 218 black residents of Middletown;
the third highest number in the state. Seth Wetmore’s probate inventory
shows that at the time of his death in 1778 he owned 6 Negro slaves.
Connecticut passed a “Gradual Emancipation” law in 1784 which was intended
to phase out slavery. No slaves were reported in the 1850 Connecticut
census.
The Wetmore family later became ardent abolitionists. The house is
said to have been a stop on the Underground Railroad but this has not been
documented.
The town grew around the port and the new wealth provided new jobs
for shipbuilders and other maritime trades, housewrights and joiners for
new construction, tailors, silversmiths and goldsmiths including Connecticut’s
only known woman silversmith, Minerva Dexter. This increase in population
brought with it a diversity of culture and opinion that the old Congregationalist
Puritans did not like but could not stop. By the 1750’s Episcopalians,
Methodists and Baptists all had places of worship in Middletown.
The year 1746 was an important one for Judge Wetmore. In that
year he was not only made Moderator but he also married his third wife,
Hannah Edwards and built his mansion at Staddle Hill. Hannah was
the sister of Johnathan Edwards, the well known Massachusetts minister.
Seth’s marriage to Hannah connects him to the “River Gods,” a group of
13 interrelated families, a “…self conscious gentry elite” who controlled,
“…the military, the magistracy and the ministry” in the pre-Revolutionary
Connecticut River Valley. Edwards was related to both the Stoddards
and the Williamses who were the most powerful of all. These families exerted
nearly total control on every aspect of life in the Valley including taste
and culture. Judge Wetmore already had the wealth and power
to qualify for this exclusive group and now he had married into it.
In fact, Jonathan Edwards refers to him as “Brother Wetmore” in a letter
to a friend. The judge may have gained a pedigree by his association
with the river Gods but he gave them a way to display their power that
is still with us.
By 1746 the threat of serious Indian attack in this part of the Valley
had virtually vanished and many towns, including Middletown, had torn down
the palisades they once used for defense. This not only opened up land
beyond the old defensive perimeter to build bigger houses than could be
constructed in town but it also demonstrated control of countryside.
People began to think outside the narrow bounds of Puritan communal life.
The towns were crowded with new people who had brought new ideas and new
(still English protestant, of course) religions. Business and politics
started to rival religion in people’s lives. Puritans were becoming
Yankees.
Judge Wetmore’s new house would embody this conscious break with tradition
and would also reinforce the power and prestige of the owner. The
most prominent men had always built the largest and most stylish houses,
of course but this one was unprecedented in the Connecticut River Valley.
His new home would be at least twice the size of any other house in Middletown.
It would stand two and a half stories high on a hill overlooking the river
two miles from town and it would be painted. (Few, if any buildings
in Middletown would have been painted in 1746.) it would be two rooms
deep and have a center hall with two inside chimneys. The center
hall was a major break from the old center chimney house where each room
led to the next and privacy was unheard of. It was not unusual for there
to be bedding in every room in the house. With the center hall, visitors
could be brought into any room in the house without disturbing any other.
Rooms began to have specialized uses.
The only traditional regional element Wetmore retained was the gable
end door on the “hall” side of the house. Even this door was another
way of controlling traffic flow into and out of the house. It opened
directly onto the informal, family side of the house could be used by those
who did not rise to the level of a formal entrance under that impressive
pediment.
The house also originally had a large gambrel roof and an elaborate
scroll pediment above a double leaf doorway. All of these features
had, in this region, only been seen on meeting houses and government buildings.
They immediately gave an air of power and authority to the building and
its owner.
Seth and Hannah built the earliest known example of what would become
the defining architectural form for generations of grand houses.
For many years, a “Mansion” would have to be 2 ½ stories tall, have
a gambrel roof and a double leaved door with an elaborate (usually scroll)
pediment, a central hall and be two rooms deep. As Hosley says, it,
“…transformed the architectural landscape of the Connecticut River Valley.”
It didn’t take long for the River Gods and other powerful men to start
applying Wetmore’s formula of architectural intimidation. Their hold
on power, based on an extended network of intermarriage and family, required
constant reminders of status and living in a mansion house was very effective
method of communication. In the next fifteen years the River God’s
network had built eight new houses using the major new elements of the
Wetmore House and remodeled two more to resemble it. The style
spread from East Hartford Connecticut, just a few miles from Middletown,
to as far as Stockbridge, Massachusetts, ninety miles away.
The Wetmores must have been comfortable in their new house. As
was the custom among the River Gods, they often entertained traveling clan
members. Among them were Reverend Jonathan Edwards (among other things,
president of New Jersey College which became Princeton), Timothy Dwight,
future president of Yale, and Aaron Burr who studied law under the Judge.
Family tradition also has it that General Lafayette visited the Wetmore
home but there is no documentation of this.
Judge Seth Wetmore died of smallpox in 1778 but the Wetmore family
continued to live in the house for the next six generations.
To see more Wetmore information click HERE
Wetmore Facts
The other day while looking through
some of my grandmother’s stuff that was hastily thrown
together when we cleaned out
her house a few years after she died, I found a scrapbook compiled
by my great-great grandfather
John Wesley Jones. In it, I believe, are 3 articles written in 1891
by
him? My grandmother used
to tell us of their journey from New York to San Francisco but this is
from “his” mouth. I will
put these up in 3 installments leaving the previous one up so newcomers
may enjoy the entire story.
It starts at the end of the journey goes to the beginning and then the
middle. A brief synopsis:
The ship sailed from New York, unloaded passengers and cargo at the
Isthmus of Panama where they
crossed on foot and by boat to the other side and were picked up
to continue to San Francisco.
Days of ‘49
Mr. Editor:
An article in the Century Magazine
by Wm. T. Coleman, and other articles in various papers have
awakened reminiscences of the
early days of California. The writer well remembers entering the
harbor of San Francisco on the
steamer California on the 15th day of July 1849. We came in
through the Golden Gate just
as the evening shadows were stealing over the landscape and the
sight to the sea-sick and weary-worn
voyagers, was one of entrancing beauty. We had been fifty
days from New York and more
than twenty from Panama. The steamer, at first intended but for
few passengers, was, as usual
at those times, overcrowded, and there was hardly a place anywhere
on deck or below, where one
could lie down at length and enjoy a night’s rest. To add to the
discomforts, not to say the
horror of the situation, a few days from Panama, cholera, which had
been epidemic there, during
our two weeks stay, appeared on the steamer, and before we reached
the cooler regions of the North,
we had consigned to the Pacific waves, eight of those who had
started out with us, with hopes
as high and expectations as brilliant as any of us who survived
them, and some few of us who
still remain to hope on. We said that we arrived on the 15th day
of
July 1849. The steamer
anchored off the east side of Telegraph Hill, at about eight o’clock and
it
was but a few minutes later
when a fusillade commenced on the hill, that resembled something
more than a miniature battle.
For an hour or more the firing continued then all became quiet and
in the morning all seemed as
peaceful and silent as if all the world were at rest. We landed just
between Montgomery and Sansome
street, near Washington, and proceeded to explore the
wonderful town of board shanties
and canvass houses, and in the afternoon finding a small sail
boat going to Sacramento, we
paid $15 for fare to Benicia and were landed here just at dark,
finally getting something Christian
to eat and a chance to sleep on the floor of a house, which, by
the way is still standing.
We started to write something
of the early and later impressions of the Vigilance Committees, but
as our pencil has run away with
us, we will have to defer it until some other time.
Last week we gave some of our
experiences in the latter part of the voyage in 1849, from New
York to San Francisco.
We did not think at the time of writing anything except our impressions
of the acts of the various vigilance
committees of California, but instead, we went back to personal
reminiscences and told a very
few things of our recollection of the latter part of our journey.
It may be of no interest to
most readers to know of the early trials of the pioneers, or argonauts
as
they are sometimes called, but
having been asked to go back in our memory and say something
beyond, we have been trying
to throw, some small light into the dim shades of the past and call
forth the ghosts of memory that
have been haunting us for years.
We have but a dim recollection
of the events that occurred from the time of embarkation at New
York, on the 15th of May, 1849,
till our arrival at Chagres some fifteen days later. We however
well remember that we called
in at Havana, that we thoroughly explored the city and the public
gardens, and that the crowd
drank several bottles of very bad wine and were very glad when we
were once more on our way towards
the Isthmus. Arriving at Chagres we had the pleasure of
waiting a few days and exploring
the surrounding swamps and the ancient fortifications on the
opposite side of the river.
At that time the steamer came to the mouth of the river, and was pulled
up along side of the shore and
discharged her cargo of passengers and freight on the bank.
We
remember distinctly of walking
a few dozen yards from the alleged hotel into the chaparral and
seeing a lizard, or something
of that species, from two to three feet in length. We shipped back
as
rapidly as possible and did
not venture again outside of what we considered safe limits. Nest
day
eight of us hired a “bungo”
and three men to propel the primitive craft and started on our
dubious journey. The first
day everything went well and we really enjoyed the dolce far niete of
the Isthmus climate and the
lower reaches of the Chagres river. Our crew, or boatmen as we
might call them, were somewhat
of a primitive kind; our captain was a dude, when in full dress
had on a stovepipe hat and a
vest discarded by some overheated traveler. The others were even
in
more primitive costume, but
they had not the civilized sense of impropriety, even in the presence
of ladies. The first night
we stopped at Dos Hermanos, a town of two shanties. The writer, going
up the bank saw a snake about
six feet long, not in boots, and again beat a hasty retreat to the
boat. The next day was
through a forest and jungle, occasionally a clearing with a plantation
of
bananas or palm trees around
it the luxurious growth of which showed the wonderful
productiveness of the soil.
Another thing we saw, that perhaps many will sneer at, was that the
branches of the trees that had
dipped into the water were covered with oysters. The woods were
alive with chattering monkeys,
screaming parrots, beautiful paroquettes and brilliant macaws.
The second night we stopped
at Gatun, quite a little village, where we were hospitably entertained
and given the best place afforded,
and as we paid a large price for all we had, parted in the best of
friends with many a Bon dios,
adios senores, from our well satisfied hosts.
I
believe this is a picture of my great great grandmother Harriet Wetmore.
If any of you have any photos or pictures from the Wetmore family about
1850 see if there is a resemblance.
This
is a Picture of Chauncey Edwards Wetmore II circa 1850, Son of Chauncey,
and his son William Brewster Wetmore. Courtesy of my new found cousin Wendie
Richardson.
If you have comments or suggestions, email me at 1wetmore@earthlink.net