Difference between revisions of "Isaac Foote"
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| − | [[File:Isaac foote 70294642 3ffc4fdb-77e5-4ab8-9e9f-e5bf7984fa02.jpeg|thumb|300px|Judge Isaac Foote, | + | [[File:Isaac foote 70294642 3ffc4fdb-77e5-4ab8-9e9f-e5bf7984fa02.jpeg|thumb|300px|Judge Isaac Foote, was another brother [of Ebenezer], who had settled in Chenango County [New York}, where he was a Judge, legislator, and generally respected man. —Katherine A. Foote.]] |
| − | + | '''Isaac Foote,''' was born at Colchester, Connecticut 4 January, 1746 to Daniel Foote and Margaret Parsons; [Foote Family;] | |
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| − | '''Isaac Foote,''' was born at Colchester, Connecticut 4 January, 1746 to Daniel Foote and Margaret Parsons; | ||
He died at | He died at | ||
Revision as of 18:10, 1 September 2021
Isaac Foote, was born at Colchester, Connecticut 4 January, 1746 to Daniel Foote and Margaret Parsons; [Foote Family;]
He died at
He married Mary Kellogg [Foot Fam;1;88], daughter of ___;
Children [Foot Fam;1;88-89]:
- Mary Foote, b. 27 Feb., 1769
- Isaac Foote, 1776–1860; was born at Stafford, Conn. April 18, 1776. Thoughout his life he followed farming. He went to New York and was appointed agent for the sale of the Lawrence and Livingston lands. He served Constable, Collector, Depuyty Sheriff and Sheriff, and was a prominent citizen of the community. He spent his last years in the village of Norwich. In politics, he was a Whig, was a member of the Congregational Church and enjoyed the confidence and high esteem of the public. Justin Foote, his son was reared adn educated in Smyrna New York amde farming his life owrk. While assisting in raising a building, he met his death by accident, June 19, 1834. His wife bore the maiden name of Irene Warner, and was the daughter of Samuel Warner.
- Portrait and Biographical Record of Winnebago and Boone Counties, Illinois, Containing Biographical Sketches of Prominent and Representative Citizens, Together with Biographies of All the Governors of the State, and of the Presidents of the United States, Biographical Publishing Company, 1892 - Boone County (Ill.)
- Amasa Foote, 1778–1869
- John Foote, 1786–1884, married, first Mary B. Johnson and had eleven children, and second, Harriet Foote, daughter of Ebenezer. [Foote Family;199]
“Judge Foote only had the benefit of the common school education of those primitive times, but that he improved it well there is abundant evidence. He was not an orator, but on occasion he was called upon to make public address [Foot Fam;1;88].
HON. ISAAC FOOTE, Abram Foote, p. 83
Hon. Isaac Foote, of Smyrna, Chenango County, (N. Y.,) was the son of Daniel Foote, of Colchester, (Conn.,) where he was born on the 4th of January, 1746. In the common schools of that town, and in his early Puritan home, he received that sound, but plain, elementary instruction, and that religious training which fitted him for a long life of practical usefulness, of strict integrity and the most consistent piety.
He resided in Colchester until May, 1768, when he removed to Stallbrd, (Conn.,) where he soon grew into the confidence of his fellow-citizens, by whom he was repeatedly elected to the General Assembly of the State. He early received a commission as Justice of the Peace, which in those days was the highest evidence of the public spirit, and the pure and high character of those who were thus honored. He was a Soldier of the Revolution, and [December 24, 1769,] before leaving Colchester, became a member of the Congregational Church.
In 1794, he emigrated to Sherburne, Chenango County, New York where he located on a farm, (which is now in the present town of Smyrna,) on which he resided nearly fifty years, until his death. In his new home, his energy, discrimination, practical judgment and amiable deportment, found ample room for exercise. He did much to promote the settlement and improvement of the country, by assisting to open roads, establish schools, organize churches, build houses of worship, and lend a helping hand to many a needy emigrant in distress.
He early received marks of the confidence and esteem of his neighbors and fellow citizens, by being elected, in 1798, a member of the lower House, and, in 1810, of the Senate of the Legislature of New York. While in that office, he gave his hearty support and advocacy to all measures to establish common schools and provide funds for their support, and he continued their ardent friend through life. In the same year, (1800.) he was appointed first Judge of Chenango County, in which office he was continued until he reached the constitutional limit of the age of sixty.
Judge Foote was married on the 31st of May, 1773, to Mary Kellogg, daughter of Jonathan Kellogg, jun., of Colchester, with whom he lived happily upward of half a century. She died November 15, 1826, aged 82 years He survived her nearly seventeen years. His death occurred at Smyrna, on the 27th of February, 1843, having reached the advanced age of ninety-seven.
There was an exceeding beauty in his bright and serene old age, following, as it did, a long life of active usefulness and of unsuspected purity both in his public and private walk. This life, after reaching its meridian, did not suddenly rush down into the darkness of the grave, but seemed to pass gradually out hke one of our longest summer days, into a serene twilight, which gradually melts into the softest night.
APPENDIX. 303
Through his long career, he was universally respected as a man of strong intellectual powers, — of strict integrity and sincerity, — of large public spirit, and the highest and purest Christian virtues. He walked uprightly in public and private life,— he was industrious in well-doing, by which he made himself useful and valuable in society :— his hand was ever ready to be put forth in any good cause, — his tongue spoke only the truth as it was in his heart: — and when he died, his friends had a comfortable hope and belief, that he had entered into the rest prepared for the people of God,— that he had gone to abide in His Tabernacle, and dwell in His Holy Hill,— inasmuch as he had walked through life uprightly, working righteousness, and speaking the truth in his heart, and had trusted in Christ and his righteousness for salvation.
G. Page 85.
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Hon. Isaac Foote, [great-grandfather of Daniel Foote, M.D. of Belvidere Illinois] was born in Colchester, Conn., January 4, 1745, and in 1795 moved to New York, locateing in what is now the town of Smyrna, Chenango County. He secured the organization of that county, while serving as a member of the State Legislature in 1798. He was appointed the first Judge of the Court of Common Pleas and General Sessions. In 1800, he was elected State Senator for four years. In 1806, he resigned his position of Judge and retired to private life. He died on his farm in the town of Smyrna February 26, 1842, at the age of ninety-seven. His wife was Mary Kellogg, a daughter of Jonathan Kellog. She was born May 30, 1768, and died at the age of eithty-two years. Thier children reached the ages of fifty-three, seventy-five, ninety-two ninety-three, and ninety-eight years, respectively.
EBENEZER FOOTE.
Ebenezer Foote removed from Colchester, (Conn.,) to Delhi, (N. Y.,) about the close of the War of the Revolution, in which he shared first the perils of a common soldier, and afterwards of a subordinate officer. While stationed near Newark, (N. J.,) he, with a detachment of the American army, was taken prisoner by the enemy, and carried to New-York. He effected his escape with Sergeant-Major Wood, and crossed the North River on a board, and landed safely, but much exhausted , at Communipaw, Jersey City, Communipaw, below Pawles Hook. He afterwards shared in the perils and triumphs of the American army at Trenton. From this date, he was employed in the Commissary Department, under Col. Champion, tiU the close of the war. After removing to Delhi, New York, he was elected to the House of Assembly, and while in that body, he was instrumental in the formation of the County ot' Delaware, of which he was appointed Clerk, and subsequently first Judge. He was also a Member of the State Senate. In public life, he was laborious and faithful in the discharge of his official duties, in which he gave universal satisfaction ; and in private life, was distinguished for his kindness, hospitality, and gentlemanly deportment. He numbered among his friends and associates, some of the most eminent men in the State. During the last years of his life, he was President of the Delaware County Bible Society, to which he made liberal donations.