Lewis
Bryant
Researched by:
William
Brackett
According to census
records Lewis Bryant was born about 1801
in New Jersey. He married Susan Folger Hatch about 1825 most likely in Hamilton
or Butler
County, Ohio. Lewis Bryant first
appeared in the Michigan census of 1840
in Bertrand Township. In his household
were one male under the age of five years,
one male aged five through nine
years, one male ten to fourteen years, one male thirty to thirty-nine
years of
age, one female ten to fourteen years,
one female thirty to thirty-nine years
of age and one female sixty to sixty-nine years of age.
In 1843 Lewis Bryant was
supervisor of Bertrand Township. The 1850 census of Berrien
County, Michigan includes: Lewis
Briant age 49 years born in New Jersey Susan
F. Briant age 43 years born in
Massachusetts David
Briant age 13 years born in Michigan Charles
Briant age 8 years born in Michigan Oscar
Briant age 5 years born in Michigan Harriet
M. Briant age 2 years born in Michigan The
1860 census of Bertrand Township of Berrien County, Michigan includes: Lewis
Briant age 59 years born in New Jersey Susan
F. Briant age 45 years born in
Massachusetts David
Briant age 23 years born in Michigan Charles
Briant age 18 years born in Michigan Oscar
Briant age 13 years born in Michigan Harriet
Briant age 11 years born in Michigan Jane
Collin age 16 years “domestic” born in Ohio Ann
White age 83 years widow born in Massachusetts The
1870 census of Buchanan, Berrien County, Michigan includes: Louis
Bryant age 69 years born in New Jersey Susan
F. Bryant age 65 years born in Massachusetts Hattie
M. Bryant 22 years born in Michigan Susan F. Bryant died in
Buchanan, Michigan on 03 Sep
1874. Her middle name was Folger and she was named that after her mother
Ann or Nancy
Ann Folger Hatch.
Ann Folger married Charles Hatch on 24 Sep
1795 in Nantucket, Massachusetts.
Charles died on 11 Sep 1808 and Ann remarried to David White on
08 Dec
1811
also in Nantucket. Charles and Ann
(Folger) Hatch had a daughter Susan Folger Hatch who was born on 04 Jan 1805. Ann (Folger) White
died
on 01 Jan 1861 in
La Porte , Indiana and is buried in
the Pine Lake Cemetery in La Porte. In
the 1860 census Ann White was living in the household of Lewis and
Susan F.
Bryant. The Berrien
County Record carried an obituary
for Susan Bryant on 03 Sep 1874 and it reads: "Died, August 27th, 1874,
in
Buchanan, Mrs. SUSAN F. BRYANT,
wife of Lewis Bryant, in the 70th year of her
age. The deceased was born in Nantucket, Mass. When quite young she
removed
with her parents to Cincinnati, Ohio.
She was married to Mr. Lewis Bryant in
1825. In 1835 they came to Michigan, making their home a few miles from
Buchanan, and more recently in Buchanan. Lewis Bryant died in
Dallas, Texas on 01 Dec 1880. The Berrien
County record carried an obituary
for Lewis Bryant on 12 Dec 1878 and it reads: "Died December 1, 1878,
in
Dallas, Texas, after a brief illness, LEWIS BRYANT,
aged 78 years. Father
Bryant was born in New Jersey. Went with his father to Cincinnati, O.,
when he
was 10 years of age, where he lived until 1836, when he came
to Berrien Co.,
Mich., living on Terre Coupee prairie until 1866, when he removed to
Buchanan.
He went to Iowa, Oct, 1877, and six weeks before his death, to Texas.
He became
a member of the Presbyterian Church in Buchanan at its organization,
and was
for many years an officer in the Church. He was an active living
Christian and
looked up to as a father by all who knew him,
and in
his death the Church to which he belonged and the whole community feel
that
they have lost a good man and a good citizen." At
http://dunhamwilcox.net/ma/O-nantucket_index.htm
you can find Nantucket Vital records.
The is an Index Vital Records of Nantucket, Massachusetts to the
Year
1850
which was published by the New England Historic Genealogical Society in
Boston, Massachusetts in 1925. In this
index under births you can find: Hatch, Betsy
Ann ch. Ann (Wid),
bp Apr 15, 1809, CR1 [w. Lewis Bryant of
Mich. D. Charles
and Nancy (Folger) b. 27th 11
mo. 1802,
PR38. Her
brother Charles Gorham Hatch was baptized this same day. Charles Gorham
Hatch
was born “25th 6 mo. 1799”. Sarah Folger,
ch. Ann (wid.), bp.
Apr. 15, 1809, CR1. [Susan F., w.
George Smith (s. John and Hepsabeth). d.
Charles and
Nancy (Folger), b. 15th, 1 mo. 1805, PR38.] In this
index under marriages you can find: Bryant, Lewis , of
Mich. And Betsy Ann Hatch d. Charles and Nancy Folger,___, 1826 [? In N.1] PR38 Susan F., d.
Charles and Nancy (Folger), and George
Smith, s. John
and Hepsabeth (Folger),
___, 1827 [in Ohio], PR38. Hatch, Ann
and David White,
Dec 8, 1811 [Nancy, wid. Charles, d. Henry Folger
and
Betsey (Coffin) (second w.) PR38 Hatch,
Charles and Ann Folger,
Sept. 24, 1795 [Charles s. Moses of Falmouth, and Nancy Folger,
d. Henry and Betsey (Coffin) (second w.), PR38 In this
index under deaths you can find: Hatch,
Charles, Sept 11, 1808, a. 36y 10m., GR1
[H. Nancy (d. Henry Folger and Betsey), s.
Moses of
Falmouth, a. 37, PR38. Yellow fever, Sept 12, PR64. These
records come from three references: PR38,
PR64 and GR1. PR38 is a private record
from William C. Folger’s genealogical
records of (1911)
in the possession
of the Nantucket Historic Association.
There is also a note to use caution with this reference “as it
is not
free from errors”. GR1 is from
tombstone readings of the Old North
cemetery. PR64 is from
the private records from a copy of
notes from the diaries of Mrs. Kezia
Fanning in the
possession of Alexander Starbuck of Waltham. It is
possible that Mr. William C. Folger may
have confused Betsey Ann Hatch and Susan F.
Hatch as having married Lewis Bryant.
Census records show that it was Susan F. who was his wife. According a
genealogical record found on
www.familysearch.org Lewis and Susan had twelve children: Nathan B. Bryant was the son of Lewis and Susan
F.
(Hatch) Bryant. The following
information for the article carried in the Niles Daily Star was his.
This is
substantiated by the fact that he is seen in the 1850 census of Berrien
County
living in the household of D. B. Cook who was a “Printer”.
The article was published on 08 Aug 1929 and it
reads: “MAN BORN NEAR NILES IN 1835 WRITES ABOUT EARLY
EVENTS OF LIFE Word of the plans for the Niles Centennial
celebration has reached an old timer out in Cresbard,
South Dakota, who was born in 1835,
lived his first few years at Terre Coupee
Prairie, Ind., and now at 94 recalls many of the early day scenes about
Niles,
where he became a printer. With a letter to Miss Alice Quimbly,
621 E. Main street, the writer, F. N.
Bryant, enclosed
an article written in a neat hand telling of things that took place
in this
section of the middlewest when Niles was
an infant
village. His article says: ‘My earliest recollection of a political
campaign
is that of Harrison, the ‘log cabin’ candidate for president. It was the year 1840. I
was five years old. My father and others spent one week making a
log cabin on trucks and taking it from Terre Coupee Prairie to LaPorte, Ind., 25 miles, with 20 yoke of oxen. My father moved from the farm to Niles in
1847. In the spring of 1848 I began a
four-year apprenticeship to learn the printing trade with D. B. Cook. I read in the papers there are only 11 left of
the
soldiers that fought in the Mexican war.
I distinctly remember the war with Mexico. The business interests of Niles had such
representative men as R. T. Twombly, Jacob
and
William Beeson, G. W. Platt, H. A. Chapin, Samuel Griffin, James Lewis,
The medical fraternity was represented by Dr.
Finley Richardson Bonine, (father of Dr.
Fred N. Bonine), Saxie
and a little pill
doctor whose name I have forgotten. In 1859 George M. Dewey and I bought the
printing
plant of Monroe G. Carlton, Dewey was a fluent writer but a crank on
the
temperance question, When it was known I was going to farming H. A.
Chapin came to me and said he had just bought an elevated cook stove
and wanted
to sell it to me. I bought it. In the spring of 1865, the 14th of
April, I drove the length of State street
in Chicago,
in a covered wagon on my way to Iowa, when State street was a vast
street I could recall a great many more time of my
early
life in Michigan but as I left there 61 years ago I don’t think there
are many
left that my rambling notes will interest.
I think every year will be my last, but I still
live on. I have voted for 18 presidents,
can see to read without glasses and could drill in the militia if I
were not so
lame.” Mr. Bryant went from this section to LaMarr, Iowa, where he settled for many years. In a letter to the LaMarr
Sentinel he relates how he went to LeMars Sentinel By William
Brackett
Mrs. Bryant, during her last sickness,
which was of but five days continuance, spoke of death with the utmost
calmness
and hopefulness. To her "dying was but going home."
She rested
sweetly and confidingly on the merits and promise of Jesus, without a
doubt or
fear respecting the future. The entire community will miss her. The
Church of
which
she was a member has lost one of its most devoted exemplary members.
Her
family has been bereft of one whose teachings, example and influence as
a christian
wife and
mother were
most lovely and estimable. She lived and died a christian. In her life and death she has
taught us
all how to live and how to died.
"Precious in the sight of the Lord is the
death of his saints."
In 1880 both his son David was living in
Dallas Texas and it is probably with him that Lewis was visiting when
he died.
Charles A. Bryant b. 1826
Henry L. Bryant b. 1828
John L. Bryant b. 1829 d. Nov 1851 in California
Charles H. Bryant b. 1831 d. 18 Jan 1836 in Bertrand Township, Berrien
Co. MI
Ann E. Bryant b. 1833
Nathan B. Bryant b. 1835 d. 1929 Cresbard,
South
Dakota, buried LeMars, Iowa.
David Bryant b. 1837 living in Texas as late as
1908.
Samuel Bryant b. 1839 d. 15 May 1839 in Bertrand Township, Berrien Co.
MI
Charles H. Bryant b. 1842 21 Feb 1865 Civil War
Theodore Bryant b. ? d. 11 Sep 1835 in Bertrand Township, Berrien Co. MI
Henry O. Bryant b. 15 Jun 1846 d. 20 Oct 1860 in Bertrand Township,
Berrien Co.
MI
Harriet M. Bryant b. 27 Jun 1848 d. 30 Mar 1943 in Dallas Texas.
This article indicates Nathan was serving an
apprenticeship with D. B. Cook as of 1848.
The article indicates it was from F. N. Bryant but this should
read
N.
B. Bryant. Nathan B. Bryant died two months after this article was
published
and is buried in the Memorial Cemetery in Le Mars, Plymouth County,
Iowa.
Cattle were more plentiful in those days than
autos are now.
I always shall remember the good advice given
the boys by Mrs. Cook, a grand, good woman.
There was a company recruited in Niles, and
the fife and drum was classical music for the boys, and we were there
in full
force. Charles E. Stewart was appointed captian.
He was
publishing a Whig paper in Niles, and he dropped the composing stick
for the
sword. He was a bright, smart man, and when word came that he had
fallen from
the deck
of steamboat and was drowned, the grief of his widow and son was
extremely sad.
W. G. Ferson, Stephen Norse, J. C.
Larimore, J. Tuttle and others. The legal
profession was represented by
Nathaniel Bacon, judge of circuit court, Charles Jewett,
Frank Muzzy, Emory M.
Plimpton, Edward Bacon and James Brown, who was judge of probate and
whose
writing looked like a haystack struck by a cyclone.
I was stuck trying to get one of his legal
notices in type and went to his office for assistance.
He looked at the manuscript awhile and then
said, what d---n fool wrote this?
Poor Jim (a victim of too much corn juice
that was sold over the
counter for three cents a glass).
and would abuse his best friend . When I
saw him near a saloon I saw where the
business was drifting to, sold out to him and bought a farm at Terre
Coupee
Prairie.
of
mourning for the great and lamented Abraham Lincoln.
Washington, D. C., in February, 1865, to try
to get two brothers transferred from army hospitals to Michigan state
hospital.
While at the capital he shook
hands with Lincoln in the White House.
That was two months before he drove through State street,
Chicago,
which was in mourning for the dead chieftain.”
October 1, 1929
DAD BRYANT HEARS CALL
A Beloved Old Resident of LeMars
Answers
Final Summons
Was a Nonagenarian
Prominent in Daily Life Here For Many Years
Dr. R.M. Figg, of this city, received a
telegram
Sunday announcing the death
of N.B. Bryant, of LeMars, at Cresbard,
S.D., where he has been making his
home the last four or five years. His death was due to old age and
marked
the passing of a spirit, which embodied the characteristics of a real
man,
who lived and labored, had a sane view of life, and was endeared by
ties of
friendship to a large number of people living in LeMars
and vicinity.
Mr. Bryant had reached the age of 94 years, exemplifying the scriptural
saying that the days of a good man are long in the land. The sobriquet
“Dad”
by which he was called for years, is
tribute in itself
to his qualities and
indicates the regard in which he was held in the community.
His life covered a long span and saw the making of much history, and Mr.
Bryant, in the course of his existence, was an observer of events and
kept
in touch with the doings of the world until the last. His unbounded
faith in
the general honesty of human kind was one of his tenets and one which
affected his monetary interests in later life.
BORN IN OHIO
Nathan B. Bryant was born in Butler County, Ohio, June 16, 1835, where
his
parents, who came from New York, were early settlers. When he was a
child
they moved to Michigan and carved a home out of the timber.
Nathan Bryant received a meager education in the country schools and
helped
on the farm. With an inquiring mind and a
prosperity
for reading, he
gathered a smattering of knowledge which in after life became well grounded
with additional information gleaned by an open mind.
BECOMES A PRINTER’S DEVIL
When a lade of thirteen years of age in 1848, he went to work in a
printing
office in Niles, Mich., and worked at that trade until 1860, when he
quit
the art preservative, and returned to the work of the farm.
Mr. Bryant, while farming in Michigan, made trips to Chicago and used to
relate early experiences when that metropolis was budding. He was in
Chicago
when the news of the assassination of President Lincoln was received and
well remembered the pall of gloom which
overcast the
country when the great
leader was stricken down by the hand of a crazed murderer.
COMES TO IOWA
Mr. Bryant was married to Susan Currier, of Rockingham, New Hampshire,
in
1865. She was a member of a family several members of which were closely
connected with political and social life in Washington D.C., for many
years.
She died in 1897.
The year of his marriage Mr. Bryant came to Iowa and bought land in
Buchanan
County, where he farmed successfully for fourteen years and then moved
to
Benton County where he lived eight years. From there he went to Faulk
County, S.D., where he lived a year and then came to LeMars
and bought a
well improved farm in Marion township where he prospered. In 1903 he
moved
to LeMars and purchased a fine home.
Living in well earned retirement and
with a comfortable competence he listened to friends who told of
fortunes
quickly made. Mr. Bryant made investments which failed to turn out as
presaged.
With altered fortune he was the same gallant gentleman as ever and
never was
heard to utter a murmur or a complaint.
While residing in LeMars, Mr. Bryant was
active in
political and community
affairs and served two terms as a member of the city council. He was
one of
the men instrumental in bringing the first Chautauqua to LeMars.
He was a
member of the Congregational Church and of the LeMars
Lodge of Elks.
He is survived by two daughters, Mrs. Otis Swift and Mrs. Marion Olin,
of
Cresbard, S.D., and two sons, Frank, of Assiniboia, Can., and Lewis Bryant
residing in Saskatchewan.
The remains were brought here for burial, arriving last night and the
funeral will be held this afternoon at 2 o’clock at the Beely
undertaking
parlors.
Members of the LeMars Lodge No. 428,
B.P.O.E. will be
in charge of the
funeral. Dr. C.A. Mock, president of Western Union College, will
deliver the
sermon.
02 Jul 2012
brackettwilliam@yahoo.com