Yates County, New York
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| Stephen PURDY from History of Yates Co., by L. C. Aldrich,         Pub. 1892          Pg  PURDY,        Stephen,         the subject of this sketch, was born in Fishkill, Dutchess        County, NY, September 17, 1787.  Although        a native of Dutchess County, yet through a residence of more than forty        years in the town of Benton, he has endeared to himself his friends and        neighbors, and all with whom he had intercourse, by his honest, upright        and conscientious dealings.  Being        scrupulously nice that every one with whom he dealt should have perfect        justice done him, he was soon regarded as one of the safest and best of        men to adjust difficulties and differences that arise between man and        man in their strife after the things of the world.         Hence, his counsels were sought and listened to, and appreciated        for their justice, impartiality, and conciliatory bearings.         Peace and good neighborhood he always regarded of far more value        than pecuniary considerations, whenever his own interests were        concerned.    Susan
        HAIGHT, his wife was born in Putnam County, NY, December 12, 1791; they        were married December 20, 1810.  In        1812 he came to what is now Yates County, and purchased the farm of                Martin
        KENDIG,         about a mile southeast of Bellona, in this State.         It was a spot �beautiful for situation,� overlooking Seneca        Lake, where in 1813, he came with his wife and commenced farming on the        farm now owned and occupied by his grad daughter,         Helen J. B.,         wife of                Cornelius S. VAN
        WYCK, of Dutchess County, and where he was a successful        farmer, and died on the farm he originally purchased, at he age of        sixty-five years, leaving to his children about 300 acres of land.         Stephen PURDY         died on January 4, 1853, leaving         Susan,         his wife        and five children him surviving. 
        Susan,        his wife died at the �old homestead�, March 30, 1882 in the        ninety-first year of her age.    Maria,        the eldest, married         Anson C. LOOMIS,         of Phelps, NY, who died in 1856,        leaving         Maria,         his wife, who died in 1883.         Their children were         Van Wyck, William H.,         and         Lafayette.  James        H.
        PURDY, his son, married first,         Harriet
        PEMBROKE; she died leaving one        child, a daughter,         Jane A.,         now the wife of         George H.
        BANKS; his second        wife was         Mary A.
        LEWIS, who died, leaving one child, a son,         Stewart L.        PURDY;         he married         Josephine B.,         the daughter of         H. Spencer BARNES,         who        now resides whit his father,         James H. PURDY,         on a part of the original        homestead of         Stephen PURDY.  Caroline                married         Henry
        BARDEN, M.D.  They        settled in Penn Yan, Yates county, where he became greatly respected as        a man, and in his profession, and died in 1871, leaving his wife,        Caroline, and two children, a daughter,         Helen
        J., and one son, 
        W.W. BARDEN,         M.D., now occupying his father�s place and        profession in Penn Yan; the wife now residing with her daughter at the        original homestead of         Stephen PURDY.  Jane        A.,         married         Charles VAN VOORHEES,         of Dutchess County, and remained on        the homestead until her death in 1866, leaving no children.          Mary
        F., the youngest child, married  Justus B.
        JOHNSON, of Seneca Falls,        where he was a successful business man, and during his later years was a        successful banker, accumulating a fine property.         His death occurred in 1885. RED JACKET from History of Yates Co., by L. C. Aldrich,         Pub. 1892          Pg  In        the month of October 1784, the treaty at Fort Stanwix was held.  On the part of the United States there were present        Commissioners
         Oliver Wolcott, Richard Butler, and Arthur Lee,  while the        celebrated Frenchman,
         Marquis de Lafayettte,  was with them in the        capacity of interested spectator.  The        Indians were also present, being represented by chiefs and sachems.  The proceedings of this first grand council had no special        relation to the lands of this locality, but at the meeting there was        brought into prominent notice one who is claimed to have been, and        beyond question was, a native of the territory afterward erected into        Yates County.  The personage        was the famous
         Red Jacket, who, though a youth at the time of the        council, afterward became a conspicuous figure in the frequent treaty        meetings.  Upon the occasion        above referred to,
         Red Jacket  was bitterly opposed to making any        concessions whatever to the whites and openly advocated a renewal of the        war.  But in this effort Red        Jacket was opposed by the noted war chief,
        'Cornplanter', and the council        of the latter prevailed, with the result of a treating fixing the        western
        boundary of the territory to be considered as belonging to the        Six Nations.    Sagoyewatha,        the Seneca name of the chief, was born near Branchport on the western        arm of Ogoyago Lake, but as to the date of his birth, there appears to        be no record, nor is it know who of the Senecas were his parents.  At the time of the treaty at Fort Stanwix the chief was a        young man and had just been elevate to the position he held.         He was the recognized orator of his tribe, not even second to the        eloquent Cornplanter, but the latter held pre-eminence, was a warrior of        mature years and one who had carved his way to fame among his people        through the cruel and merciless slaughter of white men, women and        children.  As a speaker for        his tribe and nation Saygoyewatha stood without a peer.         Indeed so powerful was his speech at the treaty ground that        Levasseur, the French writer who derived his information from Lafayette,        said of him: � His speech was a masterpiece, and every warrior who        heard him was carried away with his eloquence. �.  Red
        Jacket had, when a youth, heard a number of prominent speakers among the        Indians, and he determined to and did instruct himself in the art of        oratory; and his first or maiden effort was made on the occasion        referred to, and that brought to him the name of
        Sagoyewatha, �The        Keeper Awake,� or literally, �he keeps them awake,� as more        descriptive of his oratorical powers.         But among the whites he was generally called by the ridiculous        appellation of
         Red Jacket, a name which he transmitted to his        descendants.  He        too, had been an actor in the boarder wars, but had won no laurels in        them.  Brant
         and  Cornplanter        both hated him, declaring that he was both coward and traitor; but        theirs was the hatred of envy and jealousy.          They were accustomed to tell of the time when he made a glowing        speech urging the Senecas to battle, but while the conflict was going on        was discovered cutting up the cow of another Indian, which he had        killed.  After that he was        frequently called �The Cow Killer�, a name which was inserted in two        or three public documents, but afterward crossed out and �Red        Jacket� substituted.    The        treason with which he was charged seems to have consisted in making        several efforts for peace during
         Sullivan�s campaign without the        sanction of the war chiefs.  At        one time he is said to have secretly sent a runner to the American camp        inviting a flag of truce.  Brant        heard of this and had the unlucky messenger intercepted and killed.         Probably some of the stories         of his timidity and treachery are false, but there were many of        them and all pointed the same way.         Notwithstanding all this was the charm of his eloquence, and such        the clearness of his intellect, that he rapidly gained in influence and        was made a chief, that is a civil chief, or counselor of the sachems.          At        the beginning of the
         Revolution he was a youth of about twenty.  The British officers had been attracted by his intelligence        and frequently employed him as messenger, for which he was well        qualified by his fleetness of foot and shrewdness of mind.         They compensated him by a succession of red jackets, in which he        took great pride and from which he derived his name.  In later years,
         Red Jacket  had risen to a high position,        being mentioned by
         Proctor  as �the great speaker and a prince of the
                Turtle tribe." 
        As a matter        of fact, however, he belonged to the  Wolf  clan.  
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