[5 daughters] Cameron1
F, #6143
[5 daughters] Cameron was the daughter of Donald Charles Cameron and (unknown) Cameron of Letterfinlay.1
Citations
- [S47] James Cameron & Archer, Sarah Beatrice Cameron Crombie, The Crombies and Camerons, p. 27.
[son] Cameron1
M, #24185, b. 28 February 1874
[son] Cameron was born on 28 February 1874 in Bracadale, Inverness.1 He was the son of Capt. Donald Colin Cameron and Jane Macdonald.1
Citations
- [S89] Family Search, Scotland, Births and Baptisms, 1564-1950.
Anna Hope Camp1
F, #24193, b. 24 January 1883, d. 2 February 1943
Anna Hope Camp was born on 24 January 1883 in Geneva, New York.1 She was the daughter of Walter Hale Camp and Eliza C. Merrell.1 Anna Hope Camp died on 2 February 1943 in Los Angeles, California, at the age of 60.1
Citations
- [S232] Ancestry.com, California, Death Index, 1940-1997.
Dorothy Hale Camp1
F, #24191, b. 7 October 1885, d. 5 February 1971
Dorothy Hale Camp was born on 7 October 1885 in Watertown, New York.1 She was the daughter of Walter Hale Camp and Eliza C. Merrell.1 Dorothy Hale Camp married Henry Wood Shelton on 11 May 1912 in Watertown, New York.2 Dorothy Hale Camp died on 5 February 1971 in San Diego, California, at the age of 85.3
Edgar Van Santvoord Camp
M, #20586, b. 27 February 1914, d. 9 August 2009
Edgar Van Santvoord Camp was born on 27 February 1914 in Spokane, Spokane County, Washington.1 He was the son of Paul Van Santvoord Camp and Emma Graves.2 Edgar Van Santvoord Camp married Dorothy Jean Howe.3 Edgar Van Santvoord Camp died on 9 August 2009 in Portland, Multnomah County, Oregon, at the age of 95.4,3
Van S. Camp, beloved husband, father and high-spirited patriarch, passed away Aug. 9, 2009, at age 95. Born to Paul and Emma (Graves) Camp in Spokane, Van graduated from Portland's Grant High School and then ran the Portland office of IBM, where he met his wife and best friend of 68 years, Dorothy Jean Howe. Founder of Tigard's Air King Manufacturing, Inc., deacon in Multnomah Presbyterian Church, fixture in Tigard Rotary and the Barnstormer's Model Flying Club, Van's attainments in family, community and business were exceeded only by the enjoyment he took in them. Preceded in death by his wife, Van is missed by daughter, Patricia, son-in-law, Bob Atkins, and their children, Eric and Pamela; daughter, Carolyn, son-in-law, Bob Neighbor, and their children, Hope, Patricia and Webster; son, Greg, daughter-in-law, Sarah (Solander) Camp, and their daughters, Heather and Elizabeth; son, David, daughter-in-law, Deanna (Cook) Camp, and their children, Galen and Ruby; plus wonderful staff and friends at Willamette View.3
Van S. Camp, beloved husband, father and high-spirited patriarch, passed away Aug. 9, 2009, at age 95. Born to Paul and Emma (Graves) Camp in Spokane, Van graduated from Portland's Grant High School and then ran the Portland office of IBM, where he met his wife and best friend of 68 years, Dorothy Jean Howe. Founder of Tigard's Air King Manufacturing, Inc., deacon in Multnomah Presbyterian Church, fixture in Tigard Rotary and the Barnstormer's Model Flying Club, Van's attainments in family, community and business were exceeded only by the enjoyment he took in them. Preceded in death by his wife, Van is missed by daughter, Patricia, son-in-law, Bob Atkins, and their children, Eric and Pamela; daughter, Carolyn, son-in-law, Bob Neighbor, and their children, Hope, Patricia and Webster; son, Greg, daughter-in-law, Sarah (Solander) Camp, and their daughters, Heather and Elizabeth; son, David, daughter-in-law, Deanna (Cook) Camp, and their children, Galen and Ruby; plus wonderful staff and friends at Willamette View.3
Citations
- [S89] Family Search, Washington, County Birth Registers, 1873-1965.
- [S511] Harry F. Landon, The North Country, Vol. 2, pp. 700-750.
- [S205] Newspaper, The Oregonian (Portland, Oregon), 14 August 2009.
- [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "#107381822."
Elizabeth Camp1
F, #20591, b. 3 June 1900, d. 27 February 1986
Elizabeth Camp was born on 3 June 1900 in Watertown, Jefferson County, New York.2,3 She was the daughter of George Van Santvoord Camp and Elizabeth Frances Knowlton.1 Elizabeth Camp married Abbott Kittredge Spencer.1 Elizabeth Camp died on 27 February 1986 in Massachusetts at the age of 85.3,4
Elizabeth Norton Camp1
F, #26921, b. 3 February 1883, d. 26 November 1959
Elizabeth Norton Camp was born on 3 February 1883 in Connecticut.1 She was the daughter of Frederick Sewall Camp and Harriet Arabella Blackstone.1 Elizabeth Norton Camp died on 26 November 1959 in Santa Clara, California, at the age of 761 and is buried in Arlington National Cemetery, Arlington, Arlington County, Virginia.2
Citations
- [S232] Ancestry.com, California, U.S., Death Index, 1940-1997.
- [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "Memorial # 49317214, Elizabeth Norton Camp Smith, showing gravestone photograph."
Eluathan Camp1
M, #22106
Child of Eluathan Camp
Citations
- [S232] Ancestry.com, Sons of the American Revolution Membership Applications, 1889-1970.
Emily Blackstone Camp1
F, #25197, b. 6 March 1881, d. 22 April 1884
Emily Blackstone Camp was born on 6 March 1881 in Norwich, New London County, Connecticut.1 She was the daughter of Frederick Sewall Camp and Harriet Arabella Blackstone.1 Emily Blackstone Camp died on 22 April 1884 in Norwich, New London County, Connecticut, at the age of 31 and is buried in Yantic Cemetery, Norwich.1
Citations
- [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "# 46341411."
Frances Knowlton Camp1
F, #20588, b. 17 August 1898, d. 20 October 1954
Frances Knowlton Camp was born on 17 August 1898 in Watertown, New York.2 She was the daughter of George Van Santvoord Camp and Elizabeth Frances Knowlton.3 Frances Knowlton Camp married Wiser Brown, son of William Clinton Brown and Mary Kate Wisner, on 18 June 1921 in Watertown, Jefferson County, New York.2 Frances Knowlton Camp died on 20 October 1954 in Magee Hospital, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, at the age of 564 and is buried in Brookside Cemetery, Watertown, New York.5
Citations
- [S89] Family Search, New York, County Marriages, 1908-1935.
- [S89] Family Search, New York, County Marriages, 1847-1848; 1908-1936 Jefferson Marriage records, 1915-1922.
- [S511] Harry F. Landon, The North Country, Vol. 2, pp. 700-750.
- [S232] Ancestry.com, Pennsylvania, Death Certificates, 1906-1966.
- [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "# 3632038."
Frederick Sewall Camp1
M, #13027, b. 30 September 1848, d. 1 January 1907
Frederick Sewall Camp was born on 30 September 1848 near Watertown, New York.2,3 He was the son of Talcott Hale Camp and Ann Elizabeth Sewall.1 Frederick Sewall Camp married Harriet Arabella Blackstone in October 1874. Frederick Sewall Camp died on 1 January 1907 in Norwich, New London County, Connecticut, at the age of 58 by his own hand. He was suffering from Bright's disease3 and is buried in Yantic Cemetery, Norwich, Connecticut.4
Children of Frederick Sewall Camp and Harriet Arabella Blackstone
- Walter Trumbull Camp2 b. 28 Aug 1875, d. 29 Aug 1950
- Talcott Hale Camp2 b. 6 Dec 1877, d. 4 Oct 1943
- Emily Blackstone Camp5 b. 6 Mar 1881, d. 22 Apr 1884
- Elizabeth Norton Camp6 b. 3 Feb 1883, d. 26 Nov 1959
Citations
- [S34] Unverified internet information, http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~twigs2000/…
- [S107] 1880 US Census.
- [S89] Family Search, Connecticut Deaths and Burials, 1772-1934.
- [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "# 46341176."
- [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "# 46341411."
- [S232] Ancestry.com, California, U.S., Death Index, 1940-1997.
George Hale Camp1
M, #15691, b. 8 August 1790, d. 22 December 1850
George Hale Camp was born on 8 August 1790 in Glastonbury, Hartford County, Connecticut.2 He was the son of Talcott Camp and Nancy Hale.3 George Hale Camp married Elizabeth Hitchcock, daughter of Eliakim Hitchcock, in 1815 in Utica, New York.2,4 George Hale Camp died on 22 December 1850 in Sackets Harbor, Jefferson County, New York, at the age of 605 and is buried in Lakeside Cemetery, Sackets Harbor, Jefferson County, New York.6
Child of George Hale Camp and Elizabeth Hitchcock
- Talcott Hale Camp+1 b. 17 Jan 1816, d. 7 Feb 1897
Citations
- [S89] Family Search, Records of the First Presbyterian Church of Utica in Oneida County, N.Y., 1813-1852 Vosburgh, Royden Woodward.
- [S511] Harry F. Landon, The North Country, Vol. 2, pp. 700-750.
- [S232] Ancestry.com, Sons of the American Revolution Membership Applications, 1889-1970.
- [S232] Ancestry.com, U.S., Newspaper Extractions from the Northeast, 1704-1930 for Betsey Hitchcock.
- [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "# 64808430."
- [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "Memorial # 64808430, George Hale Camp, showing gravestone photograph."
George Van Santvoord Camp1
M, #13029, b. 9 December 1860, d. 2 February 1915
George Van Santvoord Camp was born on 9 December 1860 in Watertown, New York.2 He was the son of Talcott Hale Camp and Ann Elizabeth Sewall.1 George Van Santvoord Camp married Elizabeth Frances Knowlton, daughter of George W. Knowlton, on 26 February 1888. George Van Santvoord Camp died on 2 February 1915 in Jefferson County, New York, at the age of 542,3 and is buried in Brookside Cemetery, Watertown, Jefferson County, New York.2,4
George Van Santvoord Camp was born in Watertown, N.Y., December 9, 1860. He was fitted for college in Mt. Pleasant Academy, Sing Sing, N.Y., and was graduated from Amherst. Soon after leaving Amherst he began to work in the Jefferson County National Bank; he served for a number of years as assistant cashier, and in August, 1907, was made cashier. Amherst college. The class of eighteen hundred eighty-two, record 1882-1907.
George Van Santvoord Camp was born in Watertown, N.Y., December 9, 1860. He was fitted for college in Mt. Pleasant Academy, Sing Sing, N.Y., and was graduated from Amherst. Soon after leaving Amherst he began to work in the Jefferson County National Bank; he served for a number of years as assistant cashier, and in August, 1907, was made cashier. Amherst college. The class of eighteen hundred eighty-two, record 1882-1907.
Children of George Van Santvoord Camp and Elizabeth Frances Knowlton
- Paul Van Santvoord Camp+2 b. 24 Jan 1890, d. Jun 1963
- Henry Sewall Camp5 b. 6 Jan 1893, d. 22 Aug 1902
- Frances Knowlton Camp+2 b. 17 Aug 1898, d. 20 Oct 1954
- Elizabeth Camp+2 b. 3 Jun 1900, d. 27 Feb 1986
Citations
- [S34] Unverified internet information, http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~twigs2000/…
- [S511] Harry F. Landon, The North Country, Vol. 2, pp. 700-750.
- [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "# 64816079."
- [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "Memorial # 64816079, George Van Santvoord Camp, showing gravestone photograph."
- [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "# 64815976."
Henry Sewall Camp1
M, #20587, b. 13 December 1918, d. 23 February 1983
Henry Sewall Camp was born on 13 December 1918 in Georgia.2 He was the son of Paul Van Santvoord Camp and Emma Graves.1 Henry Sewall Camp died on 23 February 1983 in King County, Washington, at the age of 64.3
Henry Sewall Camp1
M, #24223, b. 6 January 1893, d. 22 August 1902
Henry Sewall Camp was born on 6 January 1893 in Watertown, New York. He was the son of George Van Santvoord Camp and Elizabeth Frances Knowlton.1 Henry Sewall Camp died on 22 August 1902 in Watertown, New York, at the age of 9.
Citations
- [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "# 64815976."
Jane Atwood Camp1
F, #24190, b. circa June 1856, d. 24 May 1857
Jane Atwood Camp was born circa June 1856.1 She was the daughter of Talcott Hale Camp and Ann Elizabeth Sewall.1 Jane Atwood Camp died on 24 May 1857 in Watertown, New York,1 and is buried in Brookside Cemetery, Watertown, Jefferson County, New York.2
Citations
- [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "# 70188568."
- [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "Memorial # 70188568, Jane Atwood Camp, showing gravestone photograph."
Mary Elizabeth Camp1
F, #24189, b. circa June 1854, d. 6 September 1855
Mary Elizabeth Camp was born circa June 1854.1 She was the daughter of Talcott Hale Camp and Ann Elizabeth Sewall.1 Mary Elizabeth Camp died on 6 September 1855 in Watertown, New York,1 and is buried in Brookside Cemetery, Watertown, Jefferson County, New York.2
Citations
- [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "# 70189045."
- [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "Memorial # 70189045, Mary Elizabeth Camp, showing gravestone photograph."
Paul Van Santvoord Camp1
M, #20584, b. 24 January 1890, d. June 1963
Paul Van Santvoord Camp was born on 24 January 1890 in Watertown, New York.2 He was the son of George Van Santvoord Camp and Elizabeth Frances Knowlton.1 Paul Van Santvoord Camp married Emma Graves on 28 November 1912 in Spokane, Washington.3 Paul Van Santvoord Camp died in June 1963 at the age of 73.4
Children of Paul Van Santvoord Camp and Emma Graves
- Edgar Van Santvoord Camp1 b. 27 Feb 1914, d. 9 Aug 2009
- Henry Sewall Camp1 b. 13 Dec 1918, d. 23 Feb 1983
Sewall Frederick Camp1
M, #25196, b. 18 November 1887
Sewall Frederick Camp was born on 18 November 1887 in Watertown, New York.1 He was the son of Walter Hale Camp and Eliza C. Merrell.1
Citations
- [S232] Ancestry.com, U.S. Passport Applications, 1795-1925 for Eliza M Camp.
Talcott Camp1
M, #22104
Child of Talcott Camp and Nancy Hale
- George Hale Camp+1 b. 8 Aug 1790, d. 22 Dec 1850
Citations
- [S232] Ancestry.com, Sons of the American Revolution Membership Applications, 1889-1970.
Talcott Hale Camp1
M, #13023, b. 17 January 1816, d. 7 February 1897
Talcott Hale Camp was born on 17 January 1816 in Utica, New York.2 He was the son of George Hale Camp and Elizabeth Hitchcock.3,2 Talcott Hale Camp was christened on 28 December 1817 at First Presbyterian Church, Utica, New York.3 He married Ann Elizabeth Sewall, daughter of Henry Devereaux Sewall and Mary Catherine Norton, on 3 June 1847 in Watertown, New York, the marriage was conducted by the Rev. J.R. Boyd.4 Talcott Hale Camp died on 7 February 1897 at the age of 812 and is buried in Brookside Cemetery, Watertown, Jefferson County, New York.5
"This genial and well-known gentleman, now at the age of 73 years, may regularly be found at his desk at the Jefferson County National Bank of Watertown, attending to his duties as president of that institution, which responsible position he has held for 34 years, for 25 years having had the entire management of its financial operations, under advice of an able body of directors. He has discharged his trust with conspicuous ability and success, and may well derive satisfaction from the knowledge that during these years the policy of the bank has been helpful, by its financial aid and personal encouragement, in developing the resources of Jefferson County; the stock-holders, meanwhile, having received regular and liberal dividends.
Mr. Camp was born in Utica, N.Y., and soon after his father, George Camp, removed with his family to Sackets Harbor, a place of activity and prosperity, where, in 1817, he printed the first newspaper of that village, called the Sackets Harbor Gazette. Sackets Harbor, however, failed to fulfill the prophecy of its friends in regard to its growth and prosperity, and this led many young men of that place to seek homes and occupation elsewhere. Mr. Camp was offered important positions elsewhere, but selected Watertown as a place of advancing growth and influence, and located there in the spring of 1840. He opened a drug and paint store in Loveland Paddock’s block, on Washington Place, and this prosperous business established by him has continued in the same locality for 50 consecutive years, for the last 25 years being conducted by George B. Massey and Mr. Camp’s son, Walter Hale.
Mr. Camp has been identified with numerous enterprises and corporations which have been influential in advancing the material, educational, and moral growth of his chosen residence. At an early day he advocated and assisted in the arduous attempt to build the railroad from Rome to Cape Vincent, and in 1863 was chosen one of the directors of the road, which office he held about 25 years, during seven of which he was its vice-president. The office of the treasurer of the corporation was located in Watertown, and its financial transactions were largely under the care and direction of Mr. Camp, and were so well supervised by him as to meet the hearty approval of the directors and stockholders. He has been connected with several manufacturing enterprises, but more intimately associated with the Watertown Steam Engine Company, continuing as one of its trustees for many years, and has aided in its growth until it has now become a large and flourishing concern, with one of the most extensive plants in the United States.
The Jefferson County Institute, an academy founded in 1837 by the Presbyterians and Congregationalists of the county, and for many years affording advanced educational advantages to the youth of both sexes, found in Mr. Camp a friend and supporter. For 40 years he has been one of its trustees, and is now its president; but the building, library, apparatus, etc., are leased to the city, and used by the High School, in the system of graded schools under the direction of the board of education. Mr. Camp is one of the trustees and officers of the Jefferson County Savings Bank, an institution eminently useful in encouraging persons of moderate income to deposit a portion of their earnings to accumulate and become a sure source of supply for future wants. This bank has paid no salaries to its trustees, their only compensation being the satisfaction they enjoy from the knowledge that the institution has become strong, popular, and helpful.
Mr. Camp has not been desirous of political preferment. As a patriotic citizen he has always sustained the laws and institutions of his native land; but in no sense has he been a narrow-minded partisan. Although eminently qualified, by business and executive ability and unimpeachable integrity, to fill positions of trust and responsibility in the gift of the people, he has left the race for office to be run by others. From the time of his coming to Watertown he has been a member of the First Presbyterian Church, a Christian institution recognized for its beneficient influence and generous charities, to which Mr. Camp has been a liberal contributor.
Mr. Camp is still not only active and engaged in many business pursuits, but is also prominent in social and literary circles. He is a charitable and kind-hearted Christian gentleman, and is ever ready to offer counsel and substantial aid to the numerous deserving ones who seek his advice. His physical and mental activity warrant the belief and hope that he has many more years of usefulness yet before him."6
"This genial and well-known gentleman, now at the age of 73 years, may regularly be found at his desk at the Jefferson County National Bank of Watertown, attending to his duties as president of that institution, which responsible position he has held for 34 years, for 25 years having had the entire management of its financial operations, under advice of an able body of directors. He has discharged his trust with conspicuous ability and success, and may well derive satisfaction from the knowledge that during these years the policy of the bank has been helpful, by its financial aid and personal encouragement, in developing the resources of Jefferson County; the stock-holders, meanwhile, having received regular and liberal dividends.
Mr. Camp was born in Utica, N.Y., and soon after his father, George Camp, removed with his family to Sackets Harbor, a place of activity and prosperity, where, in 1817, he printed the first newspaper of that village, called the Sackets Harbor Gazette. Sackets Harbor, however, failed to fulfill the prophecy of its friends in regard to its growth and prosperity, and this led many young men of that place to seek homes and occupation elsewhere. Mr. Camp was offered important positions elsewhere, but selected Watertown as a place of advancing growth and influence, and located there in the spring of 1840. He opened a drug and paint store in Loveland Paddock’s block, on Washington Place, and this prosperous business established by him has continued in the same locality for 50 consecutive years, for the last 25 years being conducted by George B. Massey and Mr. Camp’s son, Walter Hale.
Mr. Camp has been identified with numerous enterprises and corporations which have been influential in advancing the material, educational, and moral growth of his chosen residence. At an early day he advocated and assisted in the arduous attempt to build the railroad from Rome to Cape Vincent, and in 1863 was chosen one of the directors of the road, which office he held about 25 years, during seven of which he was its vice-president. The office of the treasurer of the corporation was located in Watertown, and its financial transactions were largely under the care and direction of Mr. Camp, and were so well supervised by him as to meet the hearty approval of the directors and stockholders. He has been connected with several manufacturing enterprises, but more intimately associated with the Watertown Steam Engine Company, continuing as one of its trustees for many years, and has aided in its growth until it has now become a large and flourishing concern, with one of the most extensive plants in the United States.
The Jefferson County Institute, an academy founded in 1837 by the Presbyterians and Congregationalists of the county, and for many years affording advanced educational advantages to the youth of both sexes, found in Mr. Camp a friend and supporter. For 40 years he has been one of its trustees, and is now its president; but the building, library, apparatus, etc., are leased to the city, and used by the High School, in the system of graded schools under the direction of the board of education. Mr. Camp is one of the trustees and officers of the Jefferson County Savings Bank, an institution eminently useful in encouraging persons of moderate income to deposit a portion of their earnings to accumulate and become a sure source of supply for future wants. This bank has paid no salaries to its trustees, their only compensation being the satisfaction they enjoy from the knowledge that the institution has become strong, popular, and helpful.
Mr. Camp has not been desirous of political preferment. As a patriotic citizen he has always sustained the laws and institutions of his native land; but in no sense has he been a narrow-minded partisan. Although eminently qualified, by business and executive ability and unimpeachable integrity, to fill positions of trust and responsibility in the gift of the people, he has left the race for office to be run by others. From the time of his coming to Watertown he has been a member of the First Presbyterian Church, a Christian institution recognized for its beneficient influence and generous charities, to which Mr. Camp has been a liberal contributor.
Mr. Camp is still not only active and engaged in many business pursuits, but is also prominent in social and literary circles. He is a charitable and kind-hearted Christian gentleman, and is ever ready to offer counsel and substantial aid to the numerous deserving ones who seek his advice. His physical and mental activity warrant the belief and hope that he has many more years of usefulness yet before him."6
Children of Talcott Hale Camp and Ann Elizabeth Sewall
- Frederick Sewall Camp+6 b. 30 Sep 1848, d. 1 Jan 1907
- Walter Hale Camp+6 b. 1 Feb 1851, d. 20 Dec 1923
- Mary Elizabeth Camp7 b. c Jun 1854, d. 6 Sep 1855
- Jane Atwood Camp8 b. c Jun 1856, d. 24 May 1857
- George Van Santvoord Camp+6 b. 9 Dec 1860, d. 2 Feb 1915
Citations
- [S153] Charles Nelson Sinnett, Sinnett's Sewall genealogy, p.11.
- [S511] Harry F. Landon, The North Country, Vol. 2, pp. 700-750.
- [S89] Family Search, Records of the First Presbyterian Church of Utica in Oneida County, N.Y., 1813-1852 Vosburgh, Royden Woodward.
- [S352] Fred Q. Bowman, 10,000 Vital Records of Central New York, p. 40.
- [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "# 46994483."
- [S34] Unverified internet information, http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~twigs2000/…
- [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "# 70189045."
- [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "# 70188568."
Talcott Hale Camp1
M, #15690, b. 6 December 1877, d. 4 October 1943
Talcott Hale Camp was born on 6 December 1877 in Norwich, New London County, Connecticut.2 He was the son of Frederick Sewall Camp and Harriet Arabella Blackstone.1 Talcott Hale Camp died on 4 October 1943 in Marin County, California, at the age of 65. (A note on Find A Grave Memorial# 87576828 states "Talcott was married three times: First he married Jesse Herrington and they had two children. Next he married Gertrude Dunham and was later divorced. He married Helen (Unknown) later").2
Citations
- [S107] 1880 US Census.
- [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "# 87576828."
Walter Hale Camp1
M, #13028, b. 1 February 1851, d. 20 December 1923
Walter Hale Camp was born on 1 February 1851 in Watertown, Jefferson County, New York.2 He was the son of Talcott Hale Camp and Ann Elizabeth Sewall.1 Walter Hale Camp married Eliza C. Merrell, daughter of Dr. Andrew Merrell, on 28 December 1881 in North Presbyterian Church, Geneva, New York.3 Walter Hale Camp died on 20 December 1923 in Watertown, Jefferson County, New York, at the age of 724 and is buried in Brookside Cemetery, Watertown, Jefferson County, New York.5
Children of Walter Hale Camp and Eliza C. Merrell
- Anna Hope Camp6 b. 24 Jan 1883, d. 2 Feb 1943
- Dorothy Hale Camp2 b. 7 Oct 1885, d. 5 Feb 1971
- Sewall Frederick Camp7 b. 18 Nov 1887
Citations
- [S34] Unverified internet information, http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~twigs2000/…
- [S232] Ancestry.com, U.S. Passport Applications, 1795-1925.
- [S205] Newspaper, Geneva Gazette, 30 December 1881.
- [S205] Newspaper, The Utica Observer Dispatch, 21 December 1923.
- [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "Memorial # 64814206, Walter Hale Camp, showing gravestone photograph."
- [S232] Ancestry.com, California, Death Index, 1940-1997.
- [S232] Ancestry.com, U.S. Passport Applications, 1795-1925 for Eliza M Camp.
Walter Trumbull Camp1
M, #15689, b. 28 August 1875, d. 29 August 1950
Walter Trumbull Camp was born on 28 August 1875 in New London County, Connecticut.2 He was the son of Frederick Sewall Camp and Harriet Arabella Blackstone.1 Walter Trumbull Camp married Louise Raymond Gage on 14 October 1903 in Portland, Maine.3 Walter Trumbull Camp died on 29 August 1950 in Connecticut at the age of 752 and is buried in Yantic Cemetery, Norwich, New London County, Connecticut.4
Citations
- [S107] 1880 US Census.
- [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "# 59992592."
- [S89] Family Search, Maine Vital Records, 1670-1921.
- [S392] Website findagrave.com (http://www.findagrave.com/) "Memorial # 59992592, Walter Trumbull Camp, showing gravestone photograph."
Adelaide Constance Campbell1
F, #11650
Adelaide Constance Campbell married Lord Arthur Lennox, son of Charles Lennox 4th Duke of Richmond and Charlotte Gordon.1
Child of Adelaide Constance Campbell and Lord Arthur Lennox
Citations
- [S132] Gary Boyd Roberts, The Royal Descents of 600 Immigrants, p. 15.
Alexander Campbell1
M, #1173, d. 1872
Alexander Campbell was the son of Lt. Col. Patrick Campbell.1 Alexander Campbell married Jane Ann Sewell, daughter of Stephen Sewell K.C. and Jane Caldwell, on 13 April 1849 in Craven Cottage, Hamilton, Lanarkshire, the service was conducted by the Rev. Mr. Henderson.2 Alexander Campbell died in 1872 in Tours, France.1
Child of Alexander Campbell and Jane Ann Sewell
- Patrick Edward Campbell+1 b. 14 Feb 1850
Anne Campbell
F, #9650, b. 1594, d. 14 June 1649
Anne Campbell was born in 1594. She was the daughter of Archibald Campbell 7th Earl of Argyle. Anne Campbell married George Gordon 2nd Marquess of Huntly, son of George Gordon 1st Marquess of Huntly and Henrietta Stewart, circa February 1607. Anne Campbell died on 14 June 1649.
Children of Anne Campbell and George Gordon 2nd Marquess of Huntly
- George Gordon Master of Huntly d. 2 Jul 1645
- James Gordon Viscount Aboyne d. 1648
- Charles Gordon 1st Earl of Aboyne d. Mar 1681
- Lewis Gordon 3rd Marquess of Huntly+ b. c 1626, d. Dec 1653
- Henry Gordon b. 1634, d. 1667
Annie Campbell1
F, #1608, b. 1881
Annie Campbell was born in 1881.1 She was the daughter of Patrick Edward Campbell and Marie Elizabeth Ottilie Sountag.1
Citations
- [S5] William Darcy McKeough, McKeough Family Tree.
Archibald Campbell 7th Earl of Argyle
M, #9652
Child of Archibald Campbell 7th Earl of Argyle
- Anne Campbell+ b. 1594, d. 14 Jun 1649
Beatrice Stella Campbell1
F, #21253, b. circa 1867, d. 9 April 1940
Beatrice Stella Campbell was born circa 1867. She was the daughter of John Tanner.2 Beatrice Stella Campbell married Major George Frederick Myddleton Cornwallis-West, son of Col. William Cornwallis West and Mary Adelaide Virginia Thomasina Eupatoria Fitzpatrick, on 6 April 1914 in Kensington Registry Office, London.2 Beatrice Stella Campbell died on 9 April 1940 in Pau, France.1