Samuel DURAND, JR

Birth:
22 Sep 1790
Cheshire, New Haven Co., Ct
Death:
4 Dec 1870
Berlin, Hartford Co., Ct
Marriage:
1 May 1834
Berlin, Hartford Co., Ct
Sources:
Durand Genealogy, 52
Notes:
                   See Note Page
BIOGRAPHY
S.R. Durand, cross-referenced to [UL::UL]History of Berlin, Connecticut[UL::UL] by North, 1916, pg. 250:
Samuel Durand, Jr. bought the farm that formerly belonged to his mother's father in Cheshire.  In 1823, he moved to Berlin, Connecticut where he and his wife joined the Worthington Church.  He was a
farmer.
From S.R. Durand's own biographical sketches:
Samuel Durand, Jr. was born September 22, 1790 in Cheshire, Connecticut, and was baptized December 19 of that year in the Congregational Church there.  He grew up on his father's farm in Cheshire, and was married on March 18, 1813 to Eloisa, a daughter of Clear and Sarah (Hull) Lewis of Stonington, Connecticut.  Subsequent to his marriage, he purchased a farm that had belonged to his mother's father in Cheshire.
In 1823, after the birth of one daughter and four sons, the family moved to Berlin, Connecticut, where Samuel Durand Jr. established a large farm.  He and his wife joined the Worthington Church in Berlin. He remained on this farm until the end of his life.  As a young boy on a motor trip with my family, I visited the old homestead.  The large colonial white house was set on a hill and the farmland sloped down to a river, where the children had a swimming hole.  [One of Samuel Durand Jr.'s daughters,] my great-aunt Jane, used to tell me of diving from overhanging tree branches into this swimming hole.
Samuel Durand Jr. lost his first wife on February 7, 1832, at a time when he had seven  children,  the oldest being 18 and the youngest 4 years old.  On May 1, 1834 he married again, to Rebecca, a daughter of Asahel and Hannah (Goodrich) Root of Berlin, CT.  She had been born October 21, 1801, and so was 32 years old at the time.  Samuel and Rebecca (Root) Durand went on to have six more children, all of whom lived later in Milwaukee, Wisconsin and are buried in Forest Home Cemetery there.
In later years of his life, Samuel Durand Jr. had a difficult time raising and selling wheat on his once very profitable New England farm. Beginning at that time, larger crops of wheat could be raised in the Midwest and shipped to the East to be sold at a lower price than New England wheat.  My grandfather, Loyal Root Durand, although only in his twenties and starting out in business, had sent his youngest sister Hannah to a girls' finishing school in Massachusetts, and made substantial contributions to help his father support the family.  After Samuel Durand Jr.'s death in 1870, his farm was sold to Huber Bushnell and my grandfather brought his mother and sisters to Milwaukee, where he provided a home and care for them.
When my great-grandfather's estate was settled after his death, one piece of the property which happened to be in another county was overlooked - a high hill called Mount Lamentation.  My great-aunt Jane used to tell me that it was a family tradition on the 4th of July each year to have a picnic at the top of this hill.  Eighty years later, a company in Hartford wished to purchase the hill, probably to erect a radio broadcasting tower on it.  In order to pay back taxes and clear title to it, had to have an attorney trace the descendants of Samuel Durand Jr.  Since he had willed his entire estate to his wife, the only living descendants of his second marriage were my brother and my two sisters and I.  However, since the company and the attorney were worried that the University of Rcohester would make a claim since they had been willed the estate of my great aunt Hannah, they insisted upon giving most of the money after taxes to the University, and only about $100 to each of us.
Facts about this person:
Alt. Born September 22, 1790
Cheshire, New Haven Co., Connecticut
Source: Crutcher.FTW
Medium: Other
Date of Import: Jan 5, 2000
Alt. Died December 04, 1870
Berlin, Hartford Co., Connecticut
Source: Crutcher.FTW
Medium: Other
Date of Import: Jan 5, 2000
Record Change  June 18, 1999
                  
Rebecca ROOT
Birth:
21 Oct 1801
Berlin, Hartford Co., Ct
Death:
10 Oct 1895
Milwaukee, Milwaukee Co., Wi
Sources:
Ancestry of Samuel Relf Durand, 119
Notes:
                   See Note Page
Facts about this person:
Alt. Born October 21, 1801
Berlin, Hartford Co., Connecticut
Source: Crutcher.FTW
Medium: Other
Date of Import: Jan 5, 2000
Alt. Died September 30, 1896
Milwaukee, Milwaukee Co., Wisconsin
Source: Crutcher.FTW
Medium: Other
Date of Import: Jan 5, 2000
Record Change  June 18, 1999
                  
Children
Marriage
1
Almira h DURAND
Birth:
25 Oct 1835
Death:
 
Marr:
 
Notes:
                   See Note Page
Facts about this person:
Record Change  June 18, 1999
                  
2
Louise Rebecca DURAND
Birth:
12 Jun 1837
Death:
 
Marr:
 
Notes:
                   See Note Page
S.R. Durand:
After the First World War, Mother and Dad became even more adventurous.  We made several motor trips east to Niagara Falls, and to visit Dad's three aunts, Jane and Louise Durand and Hannah Gould, in Rochester, New York, and several Durand cousins there who were all most hospitable to us.
Facts about this person:
Record Change  June 18, 1999
                  
3
Jane Elizabeth DURAND
Birth:
7 Jan 1839
Berlin, Hartford Co., Ct
Death:
30 Mar 1938
Rochester, Monroe Co., Ny
 
Marr:
 
Notes:
                   See Note Page
S.R. Durand:
Jane Durand lived in Milwaukee from 1870 until 1910, and   then Rochester, NY.  At the age of 95, she drove to Chattanooga,
Tennessee, with her companion and chauffeur, to visit the grave of a young boy she'd been in love with.  [The boy] was killed in the CivilWar at the battle of Lookout Mountain, in 1863.  After planting flowers from her garden around the grave, she told her compnaion, 'We were to have been married after the war.'
She was always a gay and happy person, and dearly beloved by all her relatives and friends. My grandfather also told of instances during his visits to his aunts in the 1930's, when Aunt Jane, well into her nineties,  would delight in scaring him by bounding down the stairway of the house two steps at a time;  he would admonish her that this was a dangerous thing to do at her age, and she would just laugh and laugh.
Facts about this person:
Record Change  June 18, 1999
                  
4
Birth:
7 Sep 1840
Berlin, Hartford Co., Ct
Death:
19 Nov 1871
Milwaukee, Milwaukee Co., Wi
Marr:
3 Sep 1866
Milwaukee, Milwaukee Co., Wi 
Notes:
                   See Note Page
S.R. Durand:
I know very little about my grandfather, Loyal Root Durand, who died when he was only 31 years of age.  He was born September 4, 1840 on his parents' farm in Berlin, Connecticut.  He was one of the youngest of a large family; or, I might say, the second family of his father, Samuel Durand, Jr.  The first family consisted of nine children, born between 1814 and 1828.  Samuel Durand Jr.'s first wife, Eloisa (Lewis) Durand, died in 1832 and he was remarried in 1834 in Berlin, Connecticut to Rebecca Root, daughter of Asahel and Hannah (Goodrich) Root.  Rebecca was born October 21, 1801; so she was 32 years of age at the time she became a second mother to this large family of children.
Like one of his older half-brothers, Henry Smith Durand, Loyal Root Durand went to work at the age of 16 in a store in Hartford, Connecticut.  After two years, at the urging and with the help of [a] brother who had been successful in business in Racine, Wisconsin, he went to Milwaukee and became established in the general fire and marine insurance business.  During his early years in this business, he became the main supporter of his parents, four sisters, and one younger brother.  By that time, his father was in his seventies and was no longer able to make his once-prosperous wheat farm pay [off] due to much lower prices being offered for wheat shipped from the middle west to the east. During this time, Loyal Root Durand paid to have his youngest sister, Hannah, educated at a private girls' finishing school in Massachusetts.
Loyal Root Durand married Maria Elizabeth McVickar on September 3, 1866 in St. Paul's Episcopal Church in Milwaukee.  He as well as his new father-in-law, Dr. Benjamin McVickar, had been among the founders of this church.  In writing about my grandmother, I have told what little I know about their short married life.  As a young man in his twenties, my grandfather quickly became a highly successful and respected businessman in Milwaukee.  In 1865 and 1866 he was president of the Young Men's Association, which maintained the library that had been founded by his father-in-law and six others in 1848.  This library was the forerunner of the public library in the city.
After his father's death in 1870, Loyal Root Durand brought his mother, four sisters, and younger brother to Milwaukee and provided for them.  He established the younger brother, William Timothy Durand, in the insurance business.  My grandfather in 1870 and 1871 was one of the seven directors of the Chamber of Commerce, and also Vice President of the Musical Society.  His firm of Helfenstein and Durand was the leading insurance agency in the city.  They represented eleven of the largest insurance companies in the country, and wrote up to $200,000 on single risks.  Letters I have from my grandfather to his wife indicate that he was often in the east on business.
[In the aftermath of] the great Chicago fire in October of 1871, my grandfather spent many long days in Chicago, helping the insurance companies he represented there settle claims quickly so that people who had lost homes would have funds for their [own] support.  After six weeks of day-and-night work, he died as a result of extreme exhaustion and exposure on November 19, 1871.  At the time of his death, he had been offered the presidency of the Northwestern National Insurance Company (later the NN Corporation).  Had he lived, he undoubtedly would have remained an outstanding leader in his community
for many more years.
A newspaper article of November 22, 1871 describes the funeral of Loyal Root Durand in St. Paul's Church on the previous day.  It detailed how the businessmen of Milwaukee walked two by two, preceding the hearse from the church to the cemetery, which at that time was near to where the public library is today.  It states that the funeral was one of the largest and most solemn ones ever held in the city.  After describing the flower decorations of the church and the service, the account concludes as follows: 'the deceased was an universal favorite with all that knew him, and his acquaintances were very numerous.  He was free from all ostentation, generous-hearted, plain in speech, blunt in expression, kind in his disposition, a good citizen, a firm friend, a fond husband and father.  He was an example for all young men.  He had, as a businessman, a fine career before him, gathering friends steadily and in an honest and upright manner;  of no young man in Milwaukee could it be said that he possessed better prospects for an independence, so far as worldly matters are concerned.  An all-wise but inscrutable God has seen fit to take him away, and today the yet young man, whom but as yesterday was among us and mingling with us in the apparent fullness of robust strength, sound health, and a prospective long life before him, is now in the grave, hidden from our sight, but not forgotten, his memory deeply cherished as one of Nature's nobleman - an honest man.  As one of the many who knew him well and intimately - knew well the sterling qualities of which he was made up, and the generous, manly impulses that governed all his actions - as we saw the body of our friend leave the church, we called to mind the prayer of an ancient funeral form, when an invocation at its close was offered up to the
Creator, that he 'form another citizen as virtuous as this hath been.'
This final sentence of the newspaper account about my grandfather impresses me with [its correlation to] my father Loyal Durand.  Only three and one-half years old at the time of his father's death, [he] grew up to have all the virtues and sterling qualities of his father, and to become one of the most honored men in Milwaukee for his many fine services in the public interest.  In a letter my great-grandfather, Dr. Benjamin McVickar, wrote to a cousin in the east telling of the death of his daughter's husband, he mentioned that his son-in-law recently had not only purchased a home for his family, but had also provided one for his widowed mother and his sisters.  Moreover, he had left his wife well protected with life insurance and other legacies, and had arranged that for a number of years she would receive an income from his insurance business.  He left other legacies for his mother and sisters.  This was quite remarkable in view of the fact that his whole business career had been for only a dozen years.
Facts about this person:
Burial    November 21, 1871
Milwaukee, Milwaukee Co., WI
                  
5
William Timothy DURAND
Birth:
2 Jun 1842
Death:
 
Marr:
 
Notes:
                   See Note Page
Facts about this person:
Record Change  June 18, 1999
                  
6
Birth:
7 May 1844
Death:
Notes:
                   See Note Page
Facts about this person:
Record Change  June 18, 1999
                  
FamilyCentral Network
Samuel Durand, Jr - Rebecca Root

Samuel Durand, Jr was born at Cheshire, New Haven Co., Ct 22 Sep 1790. His parents were Samuel Durand and Susanna Coughlin Hitchcock.

He married Rebecca Root 1 May 1834 at Berlin, Hartford Co., Ct . Rebecca Root was born at Berlin, Hartford Co., Ct 21 Oct 1801 daughter of Asahel Root and Hannah Goodrich .

They were the parents of 6 children:
Almira h Durand born 25 Oct 1835.
Louise Rebecca Durand born 12 Jun 1837.
Jane Elizabeth Durand born 7 Jan 1839.
Loyal Root Durand born 7 Sep 1840.
William Timothy Durand born 2 Jun 1842.
Hannah Goodrich Durand born 7 May 1844.

Samuel Durand, Jr died 4 Dec 1870 at Berlin, Hartford Co., Ct .

Rebecca Root died 10 Oct 1895 at Milwaukee, Milwaukee Co., Wi .