Andrew Mills and His Descendants
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ANDREW MILLS AND HIS DESCENDANTS With Genealogies of RelaJed Families By EVA MILLS LEE TAYLOR BETHESDA, MAR.YLA.VD 1944 Copyright, 1944 EVA MILLS LEE TAYLOR BETHESDA, MARYI.A.'ID Print,d by th, SH.E!':A.. ''-DOAH Pt:BLISH.ING HOUSE, .t:S'C. STRASBVRO, VA. FOREWORD HIS book constitutes a genealogical and biographical ecor~ of _the descendants of Andt:ew ~ills ( 1784:. ? -) and his wife, Margaret (McCorm1c) Mills, of Petogoe, Ireland, and of Oxford Twp., Grenville Co., Ont., Canada. It supplies, by means of footnotes and appendices, genealogical outlines of a number of families into which descendants of Andrew Mills married, both in Canada and in the United States. ·For those members of tl,e family regarding whom data are available, biographical articles appear. Following each article appears a list ,Jf the children, if any, arranged in the order of · birth. An asterisk (*) prefixed to a name in the lists of chil dren indicates that a biographical account of the individual appears later in the book. To enable readers to trace the relationship of individuals, the author has assigned code numbers to each. The figure 1. begins every code number and refers to the common ancestor, Andrew Mills. The next following numbers ( separated by periods) denote the children of Andrew in the order of their birth-1.1. for Elizabeth, 1.4. for John, etc. In like manner, the subsequent numbers show in each case that the person desig nated was a first, second, third, or later child. Thus the code number 1.5.4.2. ( that of the author) means that the author was de5cended from Andrew Mills (I.) through his fifth child James (5.) and through James's fourth child Mary Etta ( 4.), whose second child was Eva Mills Lee (2.). It follows that the number of divisions in each code number will show the number of generations separating each individual from Andrew Mills. Thus the author's code number 1.5.4.2., having four divisions, indicates that she is a member of the fourth generation. Arrangement of the articles is determined by the code numbers. Following the article on Andrew Mills (I.) is an article on his eldest child, Elizabeth Mills (1.1.). Thereafter 111 iv AXDREW :'-!ILLS AXD HIS DESCENOA:-."TS follow in sequence an article on her eldest son, Isaac '\Villiam (I.1.1.), an article on his eldest daughter Lillian Norma (I.1.1.l.), and an article on her daughter, Norma Florence (l.l.l.I.I.). If Lillian Norma had had other children, their sketches would follow. The system then calls for articles on the children of Isaac William's second child, Winnifred, and her children, if any. After the articles on Isaac \Villiam and his descendants follow articles on Elizabeth's second child, Andrew .Tames, and later children, a11 of whose descendants are arranged on the same principle of arboreal sequence. In this way the account of each family is completed before the account of the next succeeding family in the same gener:ition is begun. The name of each person at the beginning of a biographical article or in a list of children is followed by that person's life date or dates. For those persons living in I 943 the birth date alone is given. The death date is given when known. For those not living but whose death date is unknown, a question mark appears in lieu of the death date. The absence of a death date or of a question mark in lieu thereof indicates that the person, so far as known to the author, was living in I 943. An index of names refers the reader to each person men tioned throughout the book. Additional information regarding any branch of the fam ily would be welcomed by the author, especially informa tion concerning the descendants of Andrew's youngest daughter, Fanny, and the descendants of Andrew's third son, \Villiam, who was born in I 820 at Pettigoe, Ireland, and died in I 863 in Matilda, Dundas Co., Ont., Canada. The author wishes to express her tha:1ks to those who contributed family records for use in this genealogy. The con tribution of each is indicated in footnotes throughout the record. Acknowledgment is given particularly to the author's husband, John Wilson Taylor, for advice and editorial assistance. EvA MrLLS (LEE) TAYLOR (Mrs. John W. Taylor) 79 I 8 Bradlev Boulevard Bethesda, M~·land February 29, 1944 TABLE OF CONTENTS PAGE Foreword ------------------------------------- iii I. Andrew Mills -------------------------------- 1 1.1. Elizabeth (Mills) Beach and descendants ________ 7 1.2. John Mills and descendants------------------- 17 1.5. James Mills and descendants ------------------ 28 1.6. Sarah Mills -------------------------------- 49 1.7. William Mills and descendants_________________ 50 1.8. Andrew Mills, Jr., and descendants_____________ 51 1.9. Margaret (Mills) Huntington------------- 65 1.10. Alexander Mills and descendants ______________ 67 I.I I. Fanny (Mills) Bingham a.-id descendants________ 76 Appendix A-Beach Family ---------------------- 80 Appendix B-Bingham Family -------------------- 82 Appendix C-Churchill Family ------------------- 84 Appendix D-Dancey Family ---------------------- 87 Appendix E-Hopkins Family-------------------- 88 Appendix F-Huntington Family ------------------ 90 Appendix G-Johnston Family-------------------- 92 Appendix H-Lee Family----------------------- 93 Appendix ]-Livingston Family------------------- 96 Appendix K-MacLeod Family ------------------- 105 Appendix L-Matthie Family -------------------- 107 Appendix M-Nichol and Byrnes Families ---------- 110 Appendix N-Scovil Family ---------------------- 111 Appendix 0-Solyom de Szentantalfa Family ________ 114 Appendix P-Sutton Family ---------------------- 119 Appendix Q-Taylor Family --------------------- 121 Appendix R-Vail Family------------------------ 131 Index of Names-------------------------------- 135 V AJ.'\IDREW MILLS ND REW MILLS ( 1784- ? ) belonged to a family n Northern Ireland well known for its landed wealth, much of which, however, during Andrew's early man hood was lost in settlement of gambling debts.• Andrew m.1rried Margaret McCormicb ( ? -1859) about •· Baocd on 9t:1tement of J',brgarct (Mill,) Huntington (1.9.), c!ou,:hter of Andrew Mills, mode to her p:,ndniece, Annie Louro (Mill,) Huntington (1.2.1.1.), in JSSS during :a visit oi the L1tter to her gr.ancbunt M2rgaret in Toronto, Ont. Accordinsr to Margaret Huntington, the familr at on, time owned brgc c■t:atc■ in Ird•nd but the property wo, lost through pmblin,:. For thi, reason, it was ..id, Andrew Mill, would not allow a dcclc of c:,ird, in hi• houoc. (Rebted to author hr Annie uuro Huntington in Kitchener, Ont-, Au,:. 29, 1939). There is a tradition that the Mill, familr came ori,:inallr from Scotland. Ac• cordin~ to this tn.dition, two brothers were forced to Jc:avc Scotland to CIClpe rc!igioua persecution, prcoumably bccau,e they adhered to the Church of En1<land when the Church of Scotland wa• in the a1erndency. One brother 1cttleJ in England and the other in Ireland. Knowledge of this tradition w:11 conveyed to the author in a letter dated :S-ovembcr i, 1940, at Cuerncville, Calif., from Lucy Olive (Milt,) Pella (1.8.3.1.). ThiJ letter reads: "My p:,ndmother, Caroline Delia (Wood) Mills, told me the following about the Mills family: There were two brothers who lived in Scotland. During a rcJi;ious persecution they were driven from the country. One went to Irel:and :and one t~ England. Once (this must have been before the year 1855, a, in that year they went to ~ifornia •nd clid not vi,ic the Ea■ t together after that date) when Grandmother Caroline and Grandfather Andr.w were at a hotel in New York City, • Jetter wa, given Grandfather Mill,. It was a record of family history. Grandfather w:i1 familiar with thi, hi,cory onlr to • ccrt:ain point. On inquiry, it w;a1 diteovercd thait :another Andrew Milts was rcg-istert"d :1t the same hotel. The hotel clerk asked if they djd not belong to the same family as they looked much alike. The cwo Andrews met and compared note, and decided one was from the English broach and Grandf2thcr from the Iri,h." A ponible due to the family's b:iclcground i• contained in an incident related hr Florence Belinda Mills (1.8.3.4.), • nunc, of Palo Alto, Czlif., who •tccnded an cldcrlr Irish woman who •. maiden =me was Milla. The patient had been taken ill while pauing through Palo Alco. She remarked that Florence looked like a "udr Brigid," whose picture hangs io a ca■ tle in Ircbnd and who had rJn away •nd mar ried a fuller hr the name of Milla. The patient promi•ed to ■end Florence a <OPT of her Mills familr tree, but the procniJc was never f ulJilled. b. Some invc■tlpton claim the McCcrmic familr dc,cends from Irish ■tock allied with the illuatriou■ King Cormoc, who died in A.D. 260. Others, that th~ family migrated to Ulatcr from Scoeland in the so-called "Pbntation of Ulster" (I 608-11) under Jame■ I of Engbnd. In Scocland the McCormia were a division or subordinate I 2 ANDREW MILLS AND HIS DESCENDANTS 1809, and the family lived at Pettigoe,C a small village on the boundary between Donegal :ind Fermanagh Counties, where they owned a farm and, among other produce, raised flax.d They had eleven children, all born at Pettigoe. They were Conformists, belonging to the Church of England. Within ten years after 1828, the year in which the youngest child was born, the family emigrated from Ireland to Canada." Although accustomed to a social position associated with exten sive land ownership, Andrew formed and carried out the branch of the clan Maci.ine of Lochbuie. Burke', Cnurttl Arma.,,, givea to the Jri,b family of the name McCormiclc the motto "Sine Timore" (Without Fear).