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Historic Pelham Blog Archive
January 1, 2008
350TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION
BOOK: "THOMAS PELL
AND THE LEGEND OF THE PELL TREATY OAK" -- $11.95 (PROCEEDS AFTER
PRINTING COSTS WILL GO TO
BARTOW-PELL MANSION MUSEUM).
CLICK HERE TO BROWSE BEFORE YOU BUY!
LEARN MORE.
Tuesday, January 1, 2008
Biographical Sketch of the Reverend Robert Bolton, Jr. of Pelham
Published in 1878
Robert Bolton, Jr. was the eldest son of the Reverend Robert Bolton who
founded Christ Church and built Bolton Priory, now listed on the National
Register of Historic Places. Robert Bolton, Jr. was the author of a
popular two volume history of Westchester County first published in 1848.
In 1878, the Reverend Beverly R. Betts published a brief biographical
sketch of Robert Bolton, Jr. in the The New York Genealogical and
Biographical Record. The text of that sketch appears immediately below,
followed by a citation to its source.

"BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH OF THE REV. ROBERT BOLTON.
_____
BY REV. BEVERLY R. BETTS.
_____
The Rev. Robert Bolton, A.M., Rector of St. John's Church, Lewisboro,
Westchester County, New York, died at Pelham Priory, on the IIth day of
October, 1877, in the 64th year of his age. Mr. Bolton was the eldest son
of the late Rev. Robert Bolton, the founder of the Priory and of Christ
Church, Pelham, by his intermarriage with Anne, daughter of the Rev.
William Jay, of Bath, England. He was born at No. 13 Paragon Buildings,
Bath, in the parish of St. Michael, in the county of Somerset, England, on
Sunday, the 17th of April, 1814, and was baptized by his grandfather, the
Rev. William Jay, in Argyle Chapel, Bath. In early life he studied
medicine under Dr. Young, at Henley-on-Thames; but, although he took his
degree, he never entered on the practice of his profession. In 1836, he
came with his father to New York, and settled on a farm at Portchester, in
Westchester County. On the 8th of January, 1838, he married Elizabeth
Rebecca, daughter of James Brenton, of Newport, Rhode Island. Mrs. Bolton
died, without issue on the 12th of [Page 1 / Page 2] March, 1852. On the
5th of January, 1854, Mr. Bolton married Josephine, eldest daughter of
Brewster Woodhull, of Patchogue, Suffolk Co., N. Y., by whom he had twelve
children, eleven of whom are now living.
In 1852, in partnership with Mr. Benjamin E. Brenton, a relation of his
first wife, he purchased and carried on, for a short time, a
well-established druggist's and chemist's business, at Jamaica, Long
Island. His tastes, however, were literary and scholastic; and after two
years he sold out and began to devote himself to more congenial
occupations. He opened a female academy at New Rochelle, which he soon
removed to Tarrytown. About 1859 he took charge of a large school at
Bedford, where he remained until 1871. On the 13th of November, 1868, he
was made deacon, and on the 9th of June following he was ordained priest
by Bishop Potter. St. John's Church, Lewisboro, was his only parish. He
remained there from his ordination to his death; and by the purity of his
Christian character, the kindness of his disposition, and the earnestness
and energy which he devoted himself to his work, he won the affections of
his people, who now mourn his loss as that of a father in the Lord.
Mr. Bolton's tastes were, as has been said, literary and scholastic. It
seemed to give him pleasure to be surrounded with young people, whose
education he directed, and over whose moral and aesthetic training he
sedulously watched. His house was like a family, and his pupils were like
his children. His method combined strictness of discipline with absence of
formality. His favorite studes lay in the direction of history,
antiquities, and genealogy, for which the artistic abilities, which, like
the other members of his family, he possessed, gave him a peculiar
aptitude. The decorative work of the Priory and of the church, the
carving, painting, and glass-staining which adorn them, were designed and
executed by himself and his brothers.
His earliest publication was, 'A Guide to New Rochell,' in 1848. In the
same year he also published his great work, 'The History of Westchester
County,' in two vols. 8vo. The latter years of his life were devoted to
the preparation of a new edition of this work. This he leaves almost
completed. In 1855 he published a 'History of the Church in Westchester
County,' and in 1862, 'A Genealogical and Biographical Account of the
Family of Bolton, in England and America.'
This work is executed in the most careful and conscientious manner; its
principle is that which should guide intelligent genealogists, viz., to
take nothing for granted, but to insist upon evidence and records. From
this work it appears that the Boltons are one of those historical familis
of commoners which trace their descent for many centuries. The pedigree
begins in 1135, and is continued down to 1862. The family is established
in England, New York, and Georgia. The lines of descent are carefully
traced. The earlier part of the volume is occupied by transcripts of early
records; the latter contains accounts of several of the members of the
family. Due attention is given to dates, and the details are carefully
worked out. Mr. Bolton was no hasty genealogist.
This brief sketch may be fitly ended in the words of the Rev. C. W.
Bolton, contained in a letter to the present writer. There can be no
impropriety in summing up the character of a good man in the words of an
affectionate brother. 'He was possessed of a peculiar veneration for what
was historical. A thoroughly religious man, honest in his convictions,
straight-forward and thorough in all he undertook, remarkable for energy
and in- [Page 2 / Page 3] dustry, of a singularly kind nature, suffering
and misfortune of any kind enlisted his sympathy and aid, so much so that
the distinctions between his own interests and those of others seemed
overlooked. Having studied medicine, he was helpful to the poor, to whom
he delighted to minister, so fulfilling the Scripture: 'Pure religion, and
undefiled before God and the Father is this, to visit the fatherless and
the widows in their affliction, and to keep himself unspotted from the
world.'"
Source: Betts, Beverly R., Biographical Sketch of the Rev. Robert Bolton,
The New York Genealogical and Biographical Record, Vol. IX, Issue I, pp.
1-3 (NY, NY: The New York Genealogical and Biographical Society Jan. 1878)
(Image of family crest from p. 1).
Source: Betts, Beverly R., Biographical Sketch of the Rev. Robert Bolton,
The New York Genealogical and Biographical Record, Vol. IX, Issue I, pp.
1-3 (NY, NY: The New York Genealogical and Biographical Society Jan. 1878)
(Image of family crest from p. 1).
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posted by Blake A. Bell @
4:39 AM
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