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6351 Records for Rev Jacob Wyckoff Schenck:
Jacob Wyckoff Schenck, theological student, in the 1870 U.S. Federal Census, 1870, New Brunswick, New Jersey, age 21. He was in the household of [his mother] Catherine Schenck [transcribed Schench], head, age 43. Others in the household were Isaac L. Schenck, age 17, Annie B. Schenck, age 16, Cornelius Schenck, 13, all members of the household were born in New Jersey.
https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MND5-DS9,"United States Census, 1870", database with images: 19 March 2020), Jacob W Schench in entry for Catharine Schench, 1870.

"Rev. Jacob Wyckoff Schenck, Ghent, N.Y. Student, New Brunswick Theo. Sem., 1870–73. Reformed Church Clergyman, Ghent, 1873–79. A.M., Rutgers Coll., 1873. Died Feb. 15, 1879." Cited in The Delta Upsilon Quinquennial Catalogue, by Delta Upsilon, Rutgers, 1870, 409,
https://books.google.com/books?id=IxXPAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA409&lpg=PA409&dq=%22Rev+Jacob+Wyckoff+Schenck%22&source=bl&ots=9f2OG6qpIV&sig=ACfU3U2lW5vORqTomRsYXtEMCrSswRuXhQ&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwisls_EodroAhUJac0KHag_DZUQ6AEwAHoECAcQKA#v=onepage&q=%22Rev%20Jacob%20Wyckoff%20Schenck%22&f=false

Marriage 27 August 1873, New Brunswick, Middlesex, New Jersey to Jennie Dumont. Unfortunately the clerk inadvertently wrote his surname "Ghent" which was the locality in New York he was from at the time of his marriage.
Original image at https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FZLR-DXH,
"New Jersey Marriages, 1678-1985", database, FamilySearch, (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FZLR-DXH : 20 January 2020), JacobGhent, 1873.

1875 New York Census, Ghent, Columbia, New York.
Jacob W. Schenck, [head], age 26, minister, birthplace New Jersey,
Jennie Schenck, wife, age 24, birthplace New Jersey,
Florence Schenck, age 0, birthplace Columbia Co., New York.
"New York State Census, 1875," database with images, FamilySearch, (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VNJL-RWG: 3 April 2020), Jacob W Schenk, Ghent, Columbia, New York, United States; citing p. 63, line 26, State Library, Albany; FHL microfilm 479,102.
 
Death record 15 February 1879 at West Ghent, Columbia, New York at age 30. Citation: "New York Deaths and Burials, 1795-1952." FamilySearch, http://FamilySearch.org : 21 January 2020. Index based upon data collected by the Genealogical Society of Utah, Salt Lake City.

Catalogue of Rutgers College, New Brunswick, N.J., (1879–1880), 54, 60–61. Mentioned in Necrology on p. 54, a short biography of Rev. Jacob Wyckoff Schenck on pages 60–61 states:
"Mr. Schenck was a son of Josiah J. Schenck, and Catharine E. Stryker. He was born at Weston, Somerset Co., New Jersey, June 23d, 1849. While studying at our Grammar School, he gave his heart to Christ. He united with the First Reformed Churct New Brunswick, May 30th, 1867. He was graduated from the College in 1870, and from the Seminary in 1873. On the 8th of July in the same year he was licensed and ordained to the ministry by the Classis of Rensselaer. On the same day he was installed a pastor of the Second Reformed Church of Ghent, Columbia Co., New York. Shortly afterwards, he married Miss Jennie Dumont of New Brunswick. After a pastorate of about five and a half years at Ghent, he died of typhoid pneumonia on the 15th of February, 1879. He had never been robust, but was not prostrated and laid aside till within about five weeks of his death.
This young brother was peculiarly consecrated to his work from the time of his conversion. In a college vacation he served the American Tract Society as colporteur in Sullivan Co., New York. During his first Seminary vacation, he labored at Rtan, Illinois. The second he gave to work at Whitneyville, Maine, where he was the instrument of adding twenty persons to the church as the fruit of a revival. A call from a large and influential church in that vicinity was extended to him, which, however, he declined. During his only pastorate of little more than five years and a half, he added nearly fifty on profession of faith to his church. His people were thoroughly united in attachment to their young pastor. He never spared himself. He was greatly esteemed by his ministerial brethren. His preaching was practical and earnest, and his best eulogy is found in the fruit he was permitted to gather, and in the sincere sorrow of the whole community over his early death. In the loss of this young and devoted brother, we again read that God's way is in the sea and his path is in the great waters. It will be well for each of us to remember our Redeemer's words, and to make them his own:—'I must work the works of him that sent me, while it is day: the night cometh, when no man can work.'"
https://books.google.com/books?id=sJs4AAAAMAAJ&pg=PA54&lpg=PA54&dq=%22Rev+Jacob+Wyckoff+Schenck%22&source=bl&ots=3hRK97mX6S&sig=ACfU3U3_Q3VamJDN5doebWCWBq7MjfFfUQ&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwisls_EodroAhUJac0KHag_DZUQ6AEwAXoECAcQLg#v=onepage&q=%22Rev%20Jacob%20Wyckoff%20Schenck%22&f=false 
Schenck, Rev Jacob Wyckoff (I65375)
 
6352 Reding attended schools in Fayetteville, New Orleans and Evanston as the family moved around the country. He graduated from Northwestern University in 1924. Reding went to work first for the Hearst Papers in Chicago and then with the Koppers Company in the wood treating division. In 1931 they moved to the Boston area.

Reding and his family moved to Texas in 1934 and lived in Texarkana, Austin and Houston. They moved to Kansas City in 1939. Reding was in the Navy from 1941 to 1945, where he served as a lieutenant commander.

In 1949 he moved to Longview, Texas and formed the Lone Star Creosoting Company. He sold out and retired in 1956 and moved to Dallas. In 1960 he moved back to the family home in Fayetteville where both he and Margaretta spent the rest of their lives. 
Putman, Reding (I40746)
 
6353 Reding came from Illinois in 1836 to Washington county. He and his brother, William, settled in West Fork and later Reding lived in Fayetteville. Putman, Reding (I10807)
 
6354 Reding moved as a small child to Prairie Township in Washington county in northwest Arkansas. It was in this county that he spent the rest of his life.

As a young man, he grew up in a full household that contained four generations of Putmans. His grandmother, Prudence, lived with them through the 1830s and 1840s, as did his aunt Lavinia. In addition to his own brothers, he had the Rizley children living with him. His father, Reding senior, was taking life a little easier by then and had time to spend with young Reding.

Reding ran, unsuccessfully, as a Liberal candidate for the office of County Clerk in Washington County in 1872. He continued to practice medicine for several more years until he retired. He then went into business with George Reed in the business of running a general merchandise store in Fayetteville. He finally retired for good shortly after 1900.

Reding moved as a small child to Prairie Township in Washington county in northwest Arkansas. It was in this county that he spent the rest of his life. 
Putman, Dr. Reding II (I10808)
 
6355 Reed was a carpenter. Scudder, Reid Bundy (I22317)
 
6356 Reed was the superintendant of transportation for Red Arrow Freight Lines. He died as the result of an automobile accident. Mitchell, Robert Reed (I63616)
 
6357 Reginald served in the Marines during the Korean War. Scudder, Reginald Horace (I17686)
 
6358 Register of births in "Vital Records of Norwich, 1659–1848," Norwich, Cn.: General Societyof Colonial Wars (U.S.) Connecticut (1913), 8.
https://archive.org/details/vitalrecordsofno01norwi/page/8/mode/2up 
Family: Thomas Bingham / Mary Rudd (F23738)
 
6359 Reo was a member of the National Guard and was called to active duty during World War I. He entered the Michigan National Guard on 7 Apr 1916 and into Federal Service 1 Dec 1916. He served with Company H, 31st Infantry on the Mexican Border at El Paso and mustered out at Fort Wayne, Michigan, on 20 Jan 1917 as a private. Snitchler, Reo Arthur (I15654)
 
6360 Research by the Scudder Association, published in Scudder Searches, v. 1, no. 2, (Fall 1989): 3–4, states that the name of the wife of Richard Scudder, son of Richard Betts Scudder, was unknown.

In error, some have claimed his wife to be Hannah Stillwell. In the first several generations of the Stillwell family, and not until after the birth of Richard Scudder II's daughter Deborah was born in 1721 and Richard's own death in 1731, does a Hannah appear in the Stillwell family.
Three Stillwell histories with genealogical material show no one named Hannah Stillwell was born until after the death of Richard Scudder II.
Early memoirs of the Stilwell family, comprising the lifeand times of Nicholas Stilwell, the common ancestor of the numerous familiesbearing that surname, with some account of his brothers John and Jasper andincidentally a sketch of the history of Manhattan island and its vicinity,under the Dutch, with some contributions to a genealogy of the family,
by Stilwell, Benjamin Marshall, published in1878.
See at: https://archive.org/details/earlymemoirsofst00stil/page/278
17 pages of Stillwell genealogical history in this book have no Hannah listed in any of Stillwell family.
John E.  Stillwell, The History of Lieutenant Nicholas Stillwell, progenitor of theStillwell Family in America, (New York City, 1929).

John E.Stillwell, “The History of Captain Richard Stillwell, son of LieutenantNicholas Stillwell, and his descendants,” Third generation starts on p. 14. AHannah was mentioned but she was too late to have md. Richard Scudder, Jr.


  
Scudder, Mrs. Richard (I36167)
 
6361 Research by the Scudder Association, published in Scudder Searches, v. 1, no. 2, (Fall 1989): 3–4, states that the name of the wife of Richard Scudder, son of Richard Betts Scudder, was unknown.

In error, some have claimed that his was Hannah Stillwell. In the first several generations of the Stillwell family histories, however, and not until after the birth of Richard Scudder II's daughter Deborah was born in 1721 and Richard's own death in 1731, does a Hannah appear anywhere in the Stillwell family.
Three Stillwell histories with genealogical material show no one named Hannah Stillwell was born until after the death of Richard Scudder II.
Early memoirs of the Stilwell family, comprising the life and times of Nicholas Stilwell, the common ancestor of the numerous families bearing that surname, with some account of his brothers John and Jasper and incidentally a sketch of the history of Manhattan island and its vicinity,under the Dutch, with some contributions to a genealogy of the family,
by Stilwell, Benjamin Marshall, published in 1878.
See at: https://archive.org/details/earlymemoirsofst00stil/page/278
17 pages of Stillwell genealogical history in this book have no Hannah listed in any of Stillwell family.
John E.  Stillwell, The History of Lieutenant Nicholas Stillwell, progenitor of the Stillwell Family in America, (New York City, 1929).

John E.Stillwell, “The History of Captain Richard Stillwell, son of Lieutenant Nicholas Stillwell, and his descendants,” Third generation starts on p. 14. A Hannah was mentioned but she was too late to have md. Richard Scudder, Jr.


  
Family: Richard Scudder / Mrs. Richard Scudder (F140)
 
6362 Rest changed his name to Rest Fenner Jr. on 23 June 1947. Smith, Rest Fenner III (I31948)
 
6363 Reuben and Sarah Tisdale, along with their first-born son and another soon to be born, set up their home in Greenbrier, Virginia, but Reuben died unexpectedly. Sarah, a young widow, returned to New York City, where she raised her two sons, John Henry Tisdale and William Scudder Tisdale. She married again much later in life to Jacob Anthony, and died at the age of 86 in New York City. Scudder, Sarah Ogden Kip (I3017)
 
6364 Reuben graduated from the University of New York at Walworth in 1847. He practiced medicine in Newark, New Jersey, for 34 years. Sutphen, Dr. Reuben Morris (I30331)
 
6365 Reuben was a civil engineer. Scudder, Reuben William (I10125)
 
6366 Reuben was a civil engineer. Hartwell, Reuben Arnold (I48591)
 
6367 Reuben was a lumber merchant. Scudder, Reuben Godfrey (I15203)
 
6368 Reuben was educated in the Mahoning public schools and worked for his father on the family farn in East Mahoning township. He was a successful farmer and carried on his agricultural pursuits principally on the 140-acre farm in East mahoning township. He evenually sold it and moved to another farm he had bought in Sourth Mahoning township. There he remained until his death. He was a well-known man in his day, being energetic and progressive, held various township offices, such as constable, school director. He was a Republican and a member of the United Presbyterian Church in South Mahoning township. Hastings, Reuben (I34054)
 
6369 Reuben was wealthy, and generous, helped out needs in Guysboro, especially the church. Hart, Reuben Ingram (I47228)
 
6370 Reuben's parents were were farmers and storekeepers. He received an education at local academies, then began teaching school while studying law at a law firm. In 1837 he and a brother took over management of their father's store and assumed its debt. A more astute businessman than his father, Rueben's investments in land and lumber brought him great wealth.

Reuben entered politics in 1846 with his election as town supervisor, serving in that position for eight years. In 1852 he ran for Congress as a Free-Soil Democrat. Although his district was predominantly Whig, enough anti-slavery Whigs bolted their party to elect him as their representative. In the U.S. House he was relatively quiet, concentrating on constituent concerns, until the debate over the Kansas-Nebraska bill provoked his vociferous denunciation. The breakup of the party system in the 1850s hurt Reuben, who lost his reelection bid in 1854 to a Know-Nothing candidate. He then joined the new Republican party and was elected presiding officer of the first New York state Republican convention in 1855. He ran for Congress again in 1856, this time winning an easy victory in what was now a firmly Republican district. He served in the U.S. House until he resigned in 1864 to run for governor of New York.

Reuben defeated Horatio Seymour, the Democratic incumbent, by a slim margin of less than one percent of the vote. Once in office, though, he was able to use the governorship to make himself into the political "boss" of New York Republicans. He and the Republican legislature instituted a series of reforms, including the initiation of free public education, the founding of Cornell University, the opening of teacher-training colleges, the implementation of health and housing standards, and the creation of a professional fire department in New York City.

In 1869 the state legislature sent Reuben to the U.S. Senate. He was outmaneuvered by Senator Roscoe Conkling for control of the New York Republican party. A critic of the Grant administration, he joined the Liberal Republican movement in 1872 and supported Horace Greeley in the presidential election. With his political influence further undermined, he retired in 1875 to become a banker. In 1878 he was appointed chair of the American delegation to the International Monetary Conference in Paris. 
Fenton, Governor Reuben Eaton (I7589)
 
6371 Rev. John Lothrop recorded on the Barnstable Church Register: "My sonn Samuel & Elizabeth Scudder marryed at my house by Mr. Freeman, Nov. 28, 1644."
E. B. Huntington, A Genealogical Memoir of the Lo-Lathrop Family in this Country," p. 38. 
Family: Judge Samuel Lathrop / Abigail Doane (F23513)
 
6372 Rev. John McCurdy Strong Perry, son of David Lord Perry and wife Anne Smith Strong of Connecticut, was born in Sharon, Vt., 7 September 1806. Graduated at Yale in 1827. John md. on 12 August 1833, Harriet Joanna Lathrop, (b. 1817, daughter of Charles and Joanna [Leffingwell] Lathrop of Norwich Connecticut. John and Harriet went as missionaries to Ceylon, in 1835. John d. of cholera in Batticotta, Ceylon in March 1838. His wife died about the same time. Their child was Harriet Joanna Perry, b. Ceylon, October 1835. She later moved to New Haven, Connecticut. Source:
Ellias Warner Leavenworth, A Genealogy of the Leavenworth Family in the United States, pp. 55–56.
https://books.google.com/books?id=rFr3PRnQ2lMC&pg=PA55&lpg=PA55&dq=Rev+John+Perry+%2B%22Harriet+Joanna+Lathrop%22&source=bl&ots=Dx8kqBFMqm&sig=ACfU3U0XdWJ2WYa21l_2BZ1clvigEmh5NQ&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwir6vrjk-zhAhUQRa0KHUMBAqsQ6AEwAnoECAkQAQ#v=onepage&q=Rev%20John%20Perry%20%2B%22Harriet%20Joanna%20Lathrop%22&f=false

See also Lothropp Family Foundation, Newsletter–March 2005, volume 16, no. 1, (2005): 4.
http://www.lothropp.org/UploadFiles/Newsletters/%7BEB1DE246-A227-48BB-8929-714FA93D543D%7D.PDF

Donald Lines Jacobus, The Bulkeley Genealogy: Rev. Peter Bulkeley, being an account of his career, his ancestry, the ancestry of two wives, and his relatives in England and New England, together with a genealogy of his descendants through the seventh American generation, (1933), 751.
https://books.google.com/books?id=2k87AAAAMAAJ&pg=PA1015&lpg=PA1015&dq=Rev+John+Perry+%2B%22Harriet+Joanna+Lathrop%22&source=bl&ots=bAqemLE6FG&sig=ACfU3U0OkpUgq0a5gAs3knuAYeHNNwTy4A&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwir6vrjk-zhAhUQRa0KHUMBAqsQ6AEwA3oECAcQAQ#v=onepage&q=Rev%20John%20Perry%20%2B%22Harriet%20Joanna%20Lathrop%22&f=false 
Perry, Rev John McCurly Strong (I65232)
 
6373 Rex was a Marine gunnery sergeant during World War I. Kemper, Rex (I33043)
 
6374 Rex was an auto mechanic and in addition farmed and raised cattle. Hill, Rex Allen (I47591)
 
6375 Rex was killed in a motorcycle accident. Hill, Rex Allen Jr. (I47596)
 
6376 Rey served The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints for 23 years as president of its Mexican Mission and for six years as a general authority. He helped establish the church in Mexico and among Spanish-speaking populations in the United States and Argentina. He also translated LDS Church materials into Spanish, wrote magazine articles and spoke regularly at general conferences of the Church. He has at times been called the father of the Mexican mission. Pratt, Rey Lucero (I43743)
 
6377 Reynold died at Dearborn Hospital of injuries received when the automobile in which he was a passenger was involved earlier that day in a two-car accident at State Roads 101 and 46. Driver of the car was a brother, Leland Scudder, of Columbus. Scudder, Reynold William (I43249)
 
6378 Rhodin was a dentist, having received his dental degree from the University of Pennsylvania in 1899. He met his future wife when she became his patient. Scudder, Dr. Rhodin Cunningham (I17)
 
6379 Rhodin was a meat packer. His sister, Katherine, owned a large hotel in St. Louis, Missouri, and Rhodin probably provided meat for her business. About 1877, he lived at 626 Beaumont, St. Louis. His business, R.H. Scudder & Company, was at 1011 N. Main, St. Louis, Missouri. In 1886 he and his family moved to Pasadena, Los Angeles, staying for a year before returning to St. Louis. He and his family returned to Pasadena in 1889, to remain. Scudder, Rhodin Hord (I14)
 
6380 Richard graduated from the Newburgh Free Academy in 1956 and Hamilton College in 1960. He worked for the Newburgh City School District as a mathematics teacher at the South Junior High School from 1960 till his retirement in 1991.

Richard was a professional watercolor artist and teacher who painted, demonstrated, taught and exhibited widely throughout the United States. Among the many collections that feature his works are the U.S. Coast Guard, Mount Saint Mary College, Marine Midland Bank, the Newburgh Enlarged School District and many personal collections including that of Merv Griffin. He was an elected artist and board member of the Kent Art Association, a charter member and past president of the North East Watercolor Society, an artist member of the Hudson Valley Art Association, an artist member of the Salmagundi Club, an artist member of the American Artists Professional League, an artist member of the Missouri Watercolor Society, an artist member of the Artist's Fellowship, and was a contributing member of the U.S. Coast Guard Artist's Program. He exhibited at numerous American Watercolor Society Shows. His Biography is included in Who's Who in America, Who's Who in the World and Who's Who in American Art. Among hundreds of awards, he has won two Grumbacher gold medals, a Grumbacher silver medal and has twice been awarded the coveted U.S. Coast Guard George Grey Memorial Award. Most recently, he won best in watercolor at the Westport Outdoor Art Festival, one of the top 100 shows in the country. 
Ochs, Richard Wayne (I64083)
 
6381 Richard A. Scudder claimed a marriage for William Alburtus ro Elizabeth van der Cort in Scudder Association "Newsletter" #117, (1986) without citing a specific source but this is not confirmed at this point. Will verify if found. Alburtus, William (I343)
 
6382 Richard died instantly in a fall from the upper floor of his home to the stair landing. Coroner H. Ernest Gak said the child's neck vertebrae were fractured. Hubbard, Richard Harold (I58106)
 
6383 Richard farmed over 100 acres in the Passaic Valley in New Jersey, adjoining a river. He served as a private in the Revolutionary War. Scudder, Richard (I745)
 
6384 Richard Frothingham, History of Charlestown, 79. Learned, William (I65040)
 
6385 Richard graduated from Georgetown College. He served in the US Army during World War II and continued his education, receiving a Masters degree grom Peabody College in Nashville, Tennessee, and a doctorate from the University of Kentucky. He and his wife met at Georgetown College, where he spent his career of 30 years taching sociology, anthropology, and georgraphy. Scudder, Richard Fowler (I16729)
 
6386 Richard graduated from Princeton University with a degree in economics in 1935. He worked as a reporter for the Boston Herald and for the Newark News before joining his father at the Newark Evening News, a newspaper founded by his grandfather. He succeeded his father as publisher in 1952, a position he held until 1972. Richard founded Garden State Paper Company in1950, on the basis of an invention by him and by Robert Illingworth, an engineer employed by the Newark News. This invention for the first time made it practical to remove the ink from old newspapers and reform the bifres into newsprint of a quality equal to that of newsprint made from trees. When it became known that someone who wasn't even a paper maker was going to build a mill to manufacture newsprint from waste paper, the announcement was greeted with hilarity in the trade press. The venture was dubbed "Scudder's Folly." However, the Predential Insurance Company lent Richard $6 million on condition the mill operated within certain parameters. Outside investors, including the Rockefellers and Mellons, lent $3 million more, and the mill made its first paper in October 1961. The paper was saleable almost from the moment the mill opened. It is the only mill in North America to make the claim that it has always sold all the paper it can make. Richard was named Paper Maker of the Year by the Paper Trade Journal in 1978. He was also named National Recycler of the Year by Recycling & Resource Recovery magazine in 1979.

Richard has served on the United States government's advisory committee on Federal Policy on Industrial Innovation. He has served as director of the Environmental Action Coalition for New York City and was instrumental in forming the Committee for Resource Recovery in both New Jersey and California. He serves as a trustee of Princeton University's Environmental Institute. For ten years, he was a trustee of Rutgers University and New Jersey State University. Mr. Scudder was awarded an honorary doctorate from Monmouth University. In 1983, Richard and W. Dean Singleton bought the Gloucster county Times, a newspaper in Woodbury, New Jersey, and soon thereafter the Salem Sunbeam in Salem, New Jersey. The purchase of several smallish papers in Ohio followed, and then purchase of the Sparks Newspapers of Hayward, Newark, Pleasanton and San Remo, California. Since then the company, Media News Group, has grown to be the second largest newspaper company in the United States, publishing four daily papers in Massachusetts, Colorado, and New Mexico, three in Pennsylvania and California, two in Vermont, and one in Connecticut, Utah, West Virginia and Ohio. Altogether there are 49 daily papers and 92 weekly, total market coverage and other newspapers. Principle papers include the Denver Post, the Los Angeles News, the Long Beach Press Enterprise, the Connecticut Post, the Oakland Tribune and the Salt Lake Tribune. 
Scudder, Richard Betts (I3191)
 
6387 Richard graduated from the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy and Science in 1938 with a B.S. degree in Chemistry. He began his professional career in Philadelphia with the consulting firm of LaWall and Harrisson, followed by research and development positions with MacNeil Laboratories in pharmaceuticals and with R.M. Hollingshead in industrial and consumer products in Camden. In 1945, he joined the Product Development Department of the Atlas Powder Company in Wilmington, Delaware, which subsequently became ICI Americas. He worked there in various technical, marketing and management positions until his retirement in 1980. He was elected a Fellow of the AAAS (American Association for the Advancement of Science). Following his retirement, Mr. Fine became actively engaged as a trustee in the planning and operation of non-profit facilities for the lifetime care of senior citizens. Among his interests were travelling, the arts, woodworking, and active participation in community affairs. Fine, Richard D. (I37801)
 
6388 Richard had an orchard in Redlands. Cook, Richard Bailey (I52877)
 
6389 Richard Scudder and wife Sarah ___?, Scudder Searches, Scudder Association, v. II, no. 1, (Winter 1990): 4. Little is known about this family but Sarah unknown Scudder died in 1750 and is documented by her gravestone in the cemetery that calls her Sarah Scudder, wife of Richard. Sarah (I3614)
 
6390 Richard served in the U.S. Armed Forces from 1948 to 1961 and received the National Defense Metal. He was employed by Chrysler Corp Space Division and worked on the Saturn Systems. Later on he was employed with the former Ingalls Shipbuilding of Pascagoula for over 20 years. After his retirement, he became a Master Gardener of Jackson County. Pettit, Richard William (I45949)
 
6391 Richard Waring (abt. 1634–abt. 1699 on WikiTree. Contains data from the NYGBR article cited below.
https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Waring-284

Donald Lines Jacobus, "Notes on the Richard Waring Family," The New York Genealogical and Biographical Record, volume 102 (1971): 1–15. 
Waring, Michael Sr (I64854)
 
6392 Richard was a blacksmith. Scudder, Richard Burroughs (I1702)
 
6393 Richard was a civil engineer. Hefler, Richard Evans (I32343)
 
6394 Richard was a dentist. He served in the U.S. Navy during World War I. Ledbetter, Dr. Richard Lee (I63618)
 
6395 Richard was a farmer, with his farm including 200 acres located in the towns of Varick and Romulus, and bordering on Lake Seneca. He was a Democrat and attended the West Romulus Baptist Church. He was a Mason and a member of the Grange. Wilcox, Richard Scudder (I16811)
 
6396 Richard was a farmer. Scudder, Richard Smith (I2012)
 
6397 Richard was a farmer. Boys, Richard (I25532)
 
6398 Richard was a machinist with Wheeler Shipbuilding, Long Island, at the beginning of World War I. Scudder, Richard Roger (I18089)
 
6399 Richard was a watch maker. Mahneke, Richard Frank (I39783)
 
6400 Richard was adopted by stepfather name changed to Richard Johnson. Born Oct 18 1948, attended Leavenworth Central School, Wolcott?, until he enlisted in the US Marine Corp on Ocober 4 1966. Sent to Vietnam on March 4 1967 and served as a machine gunner in his platoon. He died of his wounds in the vicinity of Quang Tri, Republic of Vietnam, July 29 1967. He was survived by sister Kevin Van Alystine, Brother Daniel, grandmother Mrs Emma Booth of Hornell. The Memorial service held at Butler Center Methodist Church Aug 27 1967. His name is on the Viet Nam Memorial, panel 24E, #29 Coomber, Richard Herman (I8150)
 

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