38249. Margaret Ann Richardson
Margaret Ann (Richardson) Haskell died 9 July 1878 as a consequence of a collision and sinking of the brig "Kremlin" with the British steamer "Golden Grove", owned by Trumbull & Co. of England. Margaret was the wife of Dennis Atwood Haskell, captain of the Kremlin. A crewman of the "Kremlin" was also lost along with the entire cargo of sugar being carried from Cuba to Boston. The collision took place about 30 miles south of Nantucket at about 1:00 AM.
Edwin Pickering Haskell was the son of Aaron Pickering and Margaret Richardson. He assumed the Haskell surname from his stepfather Dennis Atwood Haskell..
Dennis was the son of Margaret McDaniel and her first husband, ______ Atwood. He was adopted by Aaron Stickney Haskell when Aaron became Margaret's second husband.
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The following text is from World Family Tree, Vol. 85, tree 746:Dennis was a child of Margaret McDaniel by a former husband, but was brought up with Aaron and Margaret's children and was known by the name Haskell. He died on board the bark "Shetland", and was buried Lat.10.52 N and Long. 31.56 W. Dennis was a captain of great ability. The memorial at Mt. Adams Cemetery has his age as "57 - 6 - 6". Also on the monument is "Lizzie Austin, daughter of Captain Dennis Haskell and Alma M. Haskell, died on board the bark "Shetland", August 23, 1889, buried in Lat 33.03 N and Long. 38.54 W., aged 3 - 7 - 23". Alma was a cousin of Dennis' first wife, and the daughter of Stephen Babbidge and Mary E. (Austin) Haskell. Austin D. Haskell, brother of Alma, and Ignatius Vespusian Haskell, half brother of Dennis also have markers in the lot.
The Deer Isle Record of Deaths records that he died of "african fever" at sea on July 1, 1893.
_____Captain Haskell went to sea as a young man and later commanded the big three masted Schooner Daniel Webster, and the Brig Lady of the Lake. By 1878 he commanded the Brig Kremlin when she was rammed and sunk by a steamer. His first wife Margaret Ann Richardson Haskell who was sailing with him drowned in the wreck.
In 1882 Captain Dennis Haskell was appointed to command the new three masted Barque Shetland built at Ellsworth, Maine. On a voyage to West Africa Captain Dennis Haskell contracted fever in Sierra Leone from which he subsequently died and was buried at sea.
38250. Capt. Edward A. Richardson
Edward A. Richardson was a seaman (1880 Deer Isle census). In the 1900 and 1910 censuses he is listed as a master mariner.
The Deer Isle & Stonington Press
July 1, 1927News came Wednesday of the sudden death of Capt. Edward Y. Haskell of New London, Conn., formerly of Deer Isle. He was the son of the late Capt. George D. Haskell by his first wife, and was 48 years of age. When hardly out of his teens, he became a commander of yachts and soon was one of the widest known captains on the Atlantic coast, his last command being the palatial steam yacht Viking. He married in early life Miss Helen, dr. of the late Capt. And Mrs. Ed. A. Richardson, who together with two sons, William and Edward Y., Jr., and two daughters, Barbara and Julia E., survives him.
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Newsletter of the International Haskell Family Society
Volume 13, No. 3, September 2004On April 30, 1905, a London, Connecticut, USA newspaper announced:
Captain Edward Y. Haskell of this city, master of the steam yacht Viking, has been granted a patent on an instrument to be used in connection with the mariner's compass for the purpose of sighting a moving object at sea and recording automatically its true bearing on the compass.
Prior to securing a patent, Capt. Haskell, himself a navigator and ship master of extensive experience, tested out his course marker and finder in actual service and found that under all conditions, when a moving object was sighted through the finder, the needle provided for that purpose recorded the bearing of the object accurately. Further, Capt. Haskell found that when the object was sighted a second time, the observer, having the course of his own vessel in mind, determined at once the probability or possibility of a collision, if neither vessel changed its course.
The Haskell marker and finder's simple design, accuracy of results, inexpensive cost, and lack of cumbersomeness in attachment to a binnacle renders it a valuable accessory to the navigation bridge.
... Patents have already been applied for in Europe and agencies are being formed for securing patents in all parts of the world.
The instrument that Captain E. Y. Haskell invented is used to this day. It has never been superseded because it is simple and accurate. The Pelorus, as it came to be called, is a navigational instrument resembling a mariner's compass but without magnetic needles, and having two sight vanes by which bearings are taken.By December of 1916 Captain Haskell had been able to place his invention, by then known as the "Haskell Locator", on steamers of a number of shipping lines, including Clyde, Luckenbach, Ocean, White Star, and American-Hawaiian, as well as on a goodly number of large private steam yachts.
Dennis was the son of Margaret McDaniel and her first husband, ______ Atwood. He was adopted by Aaron Stickney Haskell when Aaron became Margaret's second husband.
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The following text is from World Family Tree, Vol. 85, tree 746:Dennis was a child of Margaret McDaniel by a former husband, but was brought up with Aaron and Margaret's children and was known by the name Haskell. He died on board the bark "Shetland", and was buried Lat.10.52 N and Long. 31.56 W. Dennis was a captain of great ability. The memorial at Mt. Adams Cemetery has his age as "57 - 6 - 6". Also on the monument is "Lizzie Austin, daughter of Captain Dennis Haskell and Alma M. Haskell, died on board the bark "Shetland", August 23, 1889, buried in Lat 33.03 N and Long. 38.54 W., aged 3 - 7 - 23". Alma was a cousin of Dennis' first wife, and the daughter of Stephen Babbidge and Mary E. (Austin) Haskell. Austin D. Haskell, brother of Alma, and Ignatius Vespusian Haskell, half brother of Dennis also have markers in the lot.
The Deer Isle Record of Deaths records that he died of "african fever" at sea on July 1, 1893.
_____Captain Haskell went to sea as a young man and later commanded the big three masted Schooner Daniel Webster, and the Brig Lady of the Lake. By 1878 he commanded the Brig Kremlin when she was rammed and sunk by a steamer. His first wife Margaret Ann Richardson Haskell who was sailing with him drowned in the wreck.
In 1882 Captain Dennis Haskell was appointed to command the new three masted Barque Shetland built at Ellsworth, Maine. On a voyage to West Africa Captain Dennis Haskell contracted fever in Sierra Leone from which he subsequently died and was buried at sea.
65543. Elizabeth Austin Haskell
Died on board the Bark 'Shetland'. Buried at sea - Lat. 33.03 N. and Long. 38.54 W.
Rachel Haskell was a teacher at the time of her marriage to Burton Haskell.
Burton Albert Haskell was a seaman. In the 1910 Federal Census for Deer Isle Burton is listed as a yachtsman and in the 1930 Census a yacht captain.
Elmer Hayes Lowe was a farmer at the time of his marriage to Lucy W. Haskell. At age 33 he is listed as a fisherman in the 1920 Federal Census of Deer Isle. He operated the Reach Ferry before the highway bridge was built from the mainland to Deer Isle.
Austin David Haskell was a sail maker. For many years and at the time of his death he was the town clerk of the Town of Deer Isle, Hancock county, Maine.
Marriage Notes for Austin David Haskell and Ida Mable Winch
MARRIAGE: Married by Rev. H. Lockhart, Worcester, Massachusetts, 30 April 1885.
Alexander Abbott Thompson was a yachtsman. At age 48 he is listed as an estate caretaker (1930 Federal Census for Deer Isle) and at age 55 he is listed as a gardener.
James Harrison Haskell served in the First World War -- pfc 1045104, Battery D, 303 Field Artillery, with engagements at St. Mihiel, Meuse-Argonne offensive. He was inducted 2 October 1917 at Rockland, Maine, and received an honorable discharge at Camp Devens, Massachusetts.
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War Memorial Deer Isle, Hancock, Maine
World War 1917-1919
James H. Haskell
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Obituary
April 3, 1975Camden - James H.Haskell, 86, of 10 Curtis Avenue, died Thursday at Togus Veterans Hospital after a long illness. Born at Deer Isle on July 26,1888, he was the son or Austin and Ida Winch Haskell.
He was a retired employee of the Knox Uoolen Mills.He was a veteran of World War I having served with the U.S. Army and was a member of the Winslow-Holbrook Merrit Post, American Legion, Rockland.
Survivors include several nieces and nephews.
Interment will be at the Oak Hill Cemetery,Camden.
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U.S., Department of Veterans Affairs BIRLS Death File, 1850-2010
Name: James Haskell
Gender: Male
Birth Date: 23 Jun 1819
Death Date: 3 Apr 1975
SSN: 006073280
Branch 1: ARMY
Enlistment Date 1: 2 Oct 1917
Release Date 1: 26 Jul 1919
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Maine, Military Index, 1917-1920
Name: James H. Haskell
Birth Date: 26 Jul 1888
Birth Place: Deer Isle, Maine, USA
Serial Number: 1045104
Residence Place: Rockland
Military Date: 26 Jul 1919
Comments: Ind: Rockland, Knox Co., Oct. 2/17. Pvt; Pvt 1st cl June 24/18. Org: Btry D 303 FA to Feb. 2/18; Sup Co 20 FA to disch. Eng: St Mihiel; Meuse-Argonne; Defensive Sector. Overseas: May 27/18 to July 21/19. Hon disch on demob: July 26, 1919.
Nellie Bliss Haskell was a registered nurse.
George Morris Amerige was an attorney.
Chester Austin Haskell was unmarried. He died because of heart disease and cancer.
Stephen Dennis Haskell died of pneumonia.
Elizabeth Alma Haskell drowned in the Royal River, 13 Nov 1917. She was unmarried.
Charles Carlisle Wood was a house carpenter. In the 1920 census, for Stonington, Maine, he is listed as a cobbler in the business of repairing shoes.
Mary E. Wood is listed as a public school teacher in the 1920 US Federal Census for Stonington, Maine.
Find-a-Grave notes
Winslow was a jack of all trades like his father Captain Davis II. He was a repair man for the Deer Isle & Stonington Telephone Company as well as a jeweler and a surveyor. Her served as Deer Isle Town Clerk and he operated a blacksmith and woodworking shop. Winslow's hobby was solving civil history and genealogical relationships in the town. He died in his home in the Monument Section of Deer Isle on Saturday, March 25, 1944 after having the flu for 2 weeks.
Linda C. Haskell at age 22 was a teacher at the time of her marriage to Alton Gross in 1918.
Alton G. Gross at age 27 was a fireman at the time of his marriage to Linda Haskell.
Newsletter of the Haskell Family Society
Volume 8, No. 2, June 1999Hazel D. Haskell, 93, widow of Austin Davis Haskell, died 10 February 1999 at a Deer Isle (Maine, USA) health-care facility. Born in Deer Isle, 8 December 1905, she was daughter of George W. and Rose (Marshall) Davis.
Survivors include son, Norman Haskell of Deer Isle, daughter, Rosalyn (Haskell) Drouin of Florida, five grandchildren, five great-grandchildren, and nieces, nephews and cousins. Private interment was in Mt. Adams Cemetery, Deer Isle.
George Washington Holden was a fisherman according to the 1860 Deer Isle census. In the 1870 census he is listed as a "book agent" and the Deer Isle town records lists him as a teacher in November 1900 at age 70.
Amos Fremont Holden was a yachtsman.
65563. Clarence Holmes Wright Holden
The following notes from World Family Tree, Vol. 85, tree 746:
From "The Bangor Daily News", Bangor, Penobscot, Maine, Thursday, June 24, 1937.
"In the village of Deer Isle I chatted with a retired sea captain who in a long career at sea passed safely through the hazards of storm and shipwreck only to be shot down on land by a bandit while presiding as superintendent of Mariners House of the Seaman's Aid Society in Boston.This man is Captain Clarence W. Holden, and the story of his escape from death after being critically wounded by a stickup man is one of the marvels of Boston's surgical cases.
At 10 p.m., June last, Captain Holden was in the act of opening the safe in his office at Mariners' House when two young masked bandits walked in with drawn automatics and ordered him to 'stick 'em up'. He did so and they backed him to a chair and made him sit down. Then one of the holdup men rifled the safe, taking a change box containing $18 and overlooked more than $1,000 in bills that reposed in a small compartment of the safe.
On the way out one of the bandits growled, 'Here's good night to you old timer' and with these words he shot the captain in the back. The bullet missed the spine by a scant half-inch, passed close to the left kidney, took an upward course, barely clearing the heart and left lung, split the fifth rib in its passage, left the torso, and passed through the left arm, dropping to the floor.
'It almost seemed', said the captain,'that the hand of fate directed the course of this bullet, so that it would not strike my vital organs. Both the surgeons and the police looked upon it as something akin a miracle and declared that a similar case had never come under their observation. The bandit who shot me must have been inspired by pure viciousness, for I made no outcry, realizing the utter uselessness of protest. It was a great satisfaction to me to know that they missed most of the money in the safe. I spent many years at sea and had many narrow escapes, but nothing like this adventure on land in the city of Boston.'
Because of temporary invalidism caused by his wound, the captain resigned his position as superintendent of Mariners' House and retired to Deer Isle, the region of his birth and his boyhood, where he purchased the house of the late Captain Leslie Gray. When I called on him he was busily engaged in supervising renovations in his new home and arranging some half models and other relics which he collected during his long career as a seafaring man. He showed me his most prized possession, a finely executed half-model of the schooner Ellen Little, designed for him by John J. Wardwell and built at the yard of Cobb and Butler, Rockland.
In reviewing the career of this retired sea captain I found many things of exceptional merit, and certainly a large measure of courage and resource on the high seas. Like most Maine sea captains, Captain Holden began at the lowest rung of the ladder in seamanship and worked his way to the top through unquestioned grit and ability. Many capable sailors have gone forth from Deer Isle and have chalked up a high mark in the world of skilled seamanship, but few have surpassed the shining record of this intrepid sailor. Outstanding in his fine record are the rescues of the crew of two steamships within a period of 16 months. These ships were burning at sea when the rescues were made. Captain Holden saved a total of 48 men from these two vessels. And yet there is nothing about this little captain to indicate that he is of the material of which heroes are made. He has an unassuming personality, his eyes are mild and kindly, and his voice carries no hint of boastfulness. Just now as he is arranging to make his retirement enjoyable, and plans to have a garden so that he may be assured of a little healthful exercise during the summer months.
Captain Holden was born August 14, 1865, in North Deer Isle, the son of George W. Holden, who taught school for twenty years on Little Deer Isle and later became an itinerant music teacher, conducting singing schools in many villages in this island empire of Penobscot Bay. The captain felt a yearning for the sea when a small boy, and at 15 signed articles on the brig. Allison, owned in Boston and commanded by Captain Charles Haskell. He received $10 per month as an ordinary seaman, and his first voyage was from Boston to Digby, Nova Scotia. For 36 years he was a shipmaster, commanding various schooners and square riggers. He voyaged to the West Indies and South America, and made several trips across to England during the World War.
The captain lost but one vessel, and that was in 1903 when he was skipper of the schooner Vietta.
'We were carrying a cargo of salt,' he said, 'when a bad gale struck us off the Virginia Capes. In a twinkling our sails were torn away by the velocity of the wind and we lost our steering gear. We began to leak badly, and after many exhausing hours at the pumps we abandonded her 300 miles off the Virginia Capes. Nine of us were drifting in our small boat, expecting every minute to be swamped by the rough seas, when we were picked up by the Italian tramp steamer, Mongello, and taken to Genoa, Italy. That was my only wreck and during my long career at sea I never lost a man or had a mutiny.''Tell me about the rescues you made at sea, captain.' I asked. 'There is nothing much to say about them,' he replied. 'I was mate of the Alice E. Clark of Portland and we were bound from New York to Wilmington, N.C. when one night off the Virginia Capes we saw a steamer all afire. We could hear the shouts of the 26 members of the crew, who had leaped from the burning ship into the water. I commanded the boat that rescued them. We landed the rescued at Vineyard Haven. Sixteen months later off New York we rescued the crew of the British ship Creedmore, which had caught fire at sea. This ship was loaded with gasoline, and the crew lost no time taking to the boats. We picked up the Creedmore's boat carrying 22 men, also landed them at Vineyard Haven.
'During the World War, I commanded the schooner Ellen Little and carried several cargoes of gasoline to the Canary Islands. This was not such a nice cargo when you figure that the ocean at the time was infested with German undersea boats. But we were lucky and never actually saw a submarine, though several times we heard their gunfire, and came across the wreckage of the vessel that had been sent to the bottom. I retired from the sea in 1926, and later was appointed superintendent of Mariners' House in Boston.'
For a period of about 10 years Mrs. Holden went to sea with her husband. They have three children. The Captain told me that his chief hobby was playing solitaire."
The following are newspaper cuttings from America:
Clarence W. Holden.
"Captain Clarence W. Holden passed away at the Blue Hill hospital Friday, July 18, 1947, after a long illness. He was born in Deer Isle August 14, 1865. Besides his widow, Rose M. Holden, he leaves a brother Howard Holden of Providence, R.I.; two daughters, Mrs. R.L. Barber of Arlington Mass., and Mrs. A.L. French of Boston, Mass.; a son Charles F. Holden of Australia; several grandchildren and great-grandchildren. He was a member of the Order of the Masons in Deer Isle and the Order of the Eastern Star also in Deer Isle. Funeral services were held at the Church-on-the-Hill Monday, July 21, at 2 p.m. Interment was in the Mount Adams Cemetery."Clarence W. Holden.
"Clarence Wright Holden well known sailing captain died at the Blue Hill Hospital Friday after a long illness. Captain Holden was devoted to sailing vessels and would never go on a steam ship. For some years after retiring from the sea he was head of the Boston Seaman's Institute until he was seriously injured by armed men who were attempting to hold up the Institute office. He was born at Deer Isle August 14, 1865, and became an authority on the waters of the Atlantic both of North and South America. He was a member of the Deer Isle Masonic Lodge, the OES and the Fireman's Association. Captain Holden is survived by his wife, Rose; two daughters, Mrs. R.L. Barber of Arlington and Mrs. A.P. French of Boston; one son, Charles of Australia and several grandchildren and great-grandchildren.
The funeral was held Monday at 2 at the Deer Isle Congregational Church with the Rev. Milton McGorrill officiating. Burial was at Mt. Adams."Dr. Ferguson's notes: Account began May 11 1888 - called by Clarence to see wife, mentions wife, child and daughter; ends August 26 1902.
The following notes from World Family Tree Vol. 85, tree 746:
The following is a clipping from the newspaper about Martha.
"Funeral Service of Mrs. Martha Jane Holden.The remains of Mrs. Martha Jane Holden, a former resident of Deer Isle, were brought to Mansfield, Mass., the place she so dearly loved. The final summons came as the result of accidental burns she received at her summer home on Saturday night, October 25. Funeral services were held Friday afternoon, October 31, at 2.30 o'clock. Rev. Gove of the Congregational church of Mansfield officiating.
The choir sang 'Sometime We'll Understand,' 'Some Sweet Day' and 'In the Garden'.
There were many friends and relatives present and many beautiful floral pieces were received, among them from Elmer Lord & Co., Boston, Mrs. Sidney Treat of Malden, Dr. and Mrs. Walsh of Dorchester, the Evans family of Winthrop, Mrs. Ada Howard of Auburndale, and the Women's Guild of Arlington, Mass.She leaves besides her husband, two daughters, Mrs. Roland L. Barber of Arlington, and Mrs Albert French of Boston, a son, Charles, of Australia, and six grandchildren. Interment took place in the Cedar Grove Cemetery, Marshfield. Her many friends, who loved her dearly, will mourn this sudden and sad ending."
I have contacted the town of Marshfield and had the following information back.
Martha Jane Holden is buried there in the Cedar Grove Cemetery. This is the largest cemetery in the town, and is located beside the Congregational Church.
The head stone reads "Mother" 1866-1924 (note the birthdate difference).
She is buried beside Rowlie L. Barber 1876-1924. This is Auntie Lou's husband.
The following note from World Family Tree, Vol. 85, tree 746:
Rose was the daughter of Philip F. and Mary (Gannon) Riley. Philip was born in Naples, Italy and a barber in E. Boston and Charlestown. Mary Gannon was born in Westport, Ireland. Daughter of John and Bridget (Gannon) Gannon. Rose Mary and Clarence were married December 18, 1924.
Rose M. was born in Charlestown, Massachusetts, but the rest of her brothers and sisters were born in East Boston.
65565. George Lyman Clayton Holden
George Lyman Clayton Holden was a master mariner (1900 US Federal Census for Deer Isle).
Howard C. Holden at age 40 was a yacht steward.
Susan Haskell (Pickering) Howard died of gall stones.