fbpx
Wikipedia

Henry Leavitt Ellsworth

Henry Leavitt Ellsworth (November 10, 1791 – December 27, 1858) was a Yale-educated attorney who became the first Commissioner of the U.S. Patent Office, where he encouraged innovation by inventors Samuel F.B. Morse and Samuel Colt. Ellsworth also served as the second president of the Aetna Insurance Company, and was a major donor to Yale College,[1] a commissioner to Indian tribes on the western frontier, and the founder of what became the United States Department of Agriculture.

Henry Leavitt Ellsworth
Henry Leavitt Ellsworth, first Commissioner of the U.S. Patent Office, founder, United States Department of Agriculture
Born(1791-11-10)November 10, 1791.
DiedDecember 27, 1858(1858-12-27) (aged 67)
NationalityAmerican
OccupationAttorney
Known forFirst Commissioner of the U.S. Patent Office
Political partyFree Soil Party
Children3, including Henry
RelativesOliver Ellsworth (father)
William W. Ellsworth (brother)
Elizur Goodrich (father-in-law)

Early life edit

Ellsworth was born in Windsor, Connecticut, son of Founding Father and Chief Justice Oliver Ellsworth and Abigail Wolcott. Ellsworth graduated from Yale University in 1810, and studied law at Tapping Reeve's Litchfield Law School in 1811.[2][3] On June 22, 1813, he married Nancy Allen Goodrich (daughter of Congressman, Judge, New Haven Mayor and longtime Secretary of the Yale Corporation Elizur Goodrich and his wife Anne Willard Allen) with whom Ellsworth had three children, including son Henry W. Ellsworth.

Later in life, he had two subsequent wives, Marietta Mariana Bartlett and Catherine Smith. Ellsworth was named in part for his grandmother's family, the Leavitts of Suffield, Connecticut.[4][5] After studying law under Judge Gould in Litchfield, Connecticut, he settled first at Windsor and then at Hartford, where he remained for a decade.

Travels edit

In 1811, when he was 19 years old and a freshly minted Yale graduate, Ellsworth undertook the first of several western trips during his lifetime. Ellsworth traveled by horseback to the Connecticut Western Reserve in present-day Ohio to investigate family lands in the region. Ellsworth's father Oliver Ellsworth had purchased over 41,000 acres (170 km2) in the Western Reserve, including most of present-day Cleveland, joining with other prominent Connecticut men snapping up over three million acres (12,000 km2) sold by the state of Connecticut.[6] (Among the eight original purchasers was a family relation, merchant Thaddeus Leavitt of Suffield.) Ellsworth wrote a small, uneven book about his experiences entitled A Tour to New Connecticut in 1811. Ellsworth's mission was straightening out irregularities in land sales by the family agent.

It was an arduous trip. Along the way Ellsworth made note of attractive vistas, rowdy drunks, solicitous innkeepers and his disappointment in places of which he had heard, like Erie. The journey's rigors were relieved by a meeting with his old friend Margaret Dwight, daughter of Yale president Timothy Dwight IV, who was visiting family in present-day Warren, Ohio. "Here too", wrote Ellsworth, "I met with my good old friend Margaret Dwight, we sat down and passed a few hours in social chat." Dwight wrote her own account of her Western Reserve trip, A Journey to Ohio in 1810.[7]

Over twenty years later, in 1832, Ellsworth traveled west again, this time as U.S. Commissioner of Indian Tribes in Arkansas and Oklahoma.[8] President Andrew Jackson appointed Ellsworth one of three commissioners to "study the country, to mark the boundaries, to pacify the warring Indians and, in general to establish order and justice" after Congress's passage of the 1830 Indian Removal Act. Ellsworth travelled to Fort Gibson to investigate the situation. (Some critics blame Ellsworth for being complicit in the subsequent removal of Native Americans to Indian Territory, present-day Oklahoma, particularly since Ellsworth's appointment and subsequent western trip followed the Indian Removal Act, Andrew Jackson's first significant act as president. Other historians note Ellsworth's sympathetic outlook towards the tribes.)[9]

 
Oliver Ellsworth Homestead, Windsor, Connecticut, birthplace of Henry Leavitt Ellsworth, National Historic Landmark

Along the way, Ellsworth made stops in Cincinnati and Louisville, then traveled on to St. Louis, Missouri, where he met with explorer William Clark and saw the recently captured Native American leader Black Hawk, chief of the Sauk people. Leavitt's mission was a complicated one: he was charged with trying to mediate between the conflicting claims of several Indian tribes, who were being forced into an ever-smaller area, in competition with newer immigrants and the interests of the Chouteau family, the powerful St. Louis magnates of the Midwestern fur trade.[10]

Ellsworth was accompanied on the expedition by three companions: author Washington Irving, who recorded his impressions in A Tour on the Prairies; Charles La Trobe, an Englishman, mountaineer and travel writer who later served in the British diplomatic corps in the West Indies and Australia; and Swiss Count Albert Pourtales.[11]

Washington Irving wrote of Henry Leavitt Ellsworth, "this worthy leader of our little band": "He was a native of one of the towns of Connecticut, a man in whom a course of legal practice and political life had not been able to vitiate an innate simplicity and benevolence of heart. The greater part of his days had been passed in the bosom of his family and the society of deacons, elders, and statesmen, on the peaceful banks of the Connecticut; when suddenly he had been called to mount his steed, shoulder his rifle and mingle among stark hunters, backwoodsmen, and naked savages, on the trackless wilds of the Far West."[12]

Patent Office edit

In 1835, Ellsworth was elected mayor of Hartford, Connecticut, but had served only a month when he was appointed the first Commissioner of the U.S. Patent Office, an office he held for ten years, from 1835 until 1845. His twin brother William W. Ellsworth was Governor of Connecticut from 1838 to 1842, and served as a U.S. Congressman from Connecticut as well. William Wolcott Ellsworth was married to the daughter of Noah Webster, the publisher of the eponymous dictionaries.

When he arrived at the Patent Office, Ellsworth found one third of the floor-space in his office occupied by over 60 models of inventions; he moved them to a separate room. He also found that no list of patent applicants had ever been drawn up, a deficiency he soon corrected.

 
Broadside advertising sale by Ellsworth of parcels of his western lands, Lafayette, Indiana, 1847

Acting as Patent Commissioner, Ellsworth made a decision that profoundly affected the future of Hartford and Connecticut. The young Samuel Colt was struggling to establish a firm to manufacture his new revolver. Ellsworth became interested in Colt's invention, and in 1836 made the decision to issue Colt U.S. Patent No. 138. On the basis of Ellsworth's decision, Colt was able to raise some $200,000 from investors to incorporate the Patent Arms Manufacturing Company of Paterson, New Jersey, the forerunner of the mighty Colt arms manufacturing empire.[13]

In today's world Ellsworth would be described as an early technology adapter. He became so interested, for instance, in a new-fangled invention by Samuel Morse called the telegraph that Ellsworth petitioned Congress for a $30,000 grant to test the possibilities of the technology.[14]

From Ellsworth's exposure to the West and knowledge of inventions, he prophesied late in life that the lands of the West would be cultivated by means of steam plows. This prophecy was introduced in the probate of his will in an attempt to prove that he was of unsound mind.

Ellsworth was proven correct, of course, and his interest in agriculture during his time as Patent Commissioner induced Congress in 1839 to appropriate the first monies for farming, which were used to collect seeds from foreign countries and distribute them through the United States post office, as Ellsworth had urged. By 1845 Ellsworth's patent office was performing the functions of a full-fledged agricultural bureau. For this accomplishment Ellsworth earned the sobriquet "Father of the United States Department of Agriculture."

A comment by Ellsworth about the increased workload at the patent office, taken out of context and embellished, was apparently the source of an urban legend that a patent office official (Charles H. Duell in some versions) claimed that everything which could be invented had already been invented.[15] In his 1843 report to Congress, Ellsworth stated: "The advancement of the arts, from year to year, taxes our credulity and seems to presage the arrival of that period when human improvement must end." The report then lists a record number of patents, implying his comment was intended to be humorous.[16]

Following Ellsworth's stint in the Patent Office, he settled in Lafayette, Indiana, acting as an agent for purchase and settlement of public land, but in 1857 he returned to Connecticut. While in Indiana, he served as a presidential elector on the Free Soil Party ticket in 1848.[17] Ellsworth later served as an early president of the Aetna Insurance Company. He was an early benefactor of Yale College, donating some $700,000 to his alma mater, as well as title to the Ellsworth lands in the former Western Reserve.[18]

Legacy edit

 
The Morse Telegraph, one of many inventions championed by Henry Leavitt Ellsworth

Ellsworth died, aged 67, on December 27, 1858, in Fair Haven, Connecticut. Following his death, Ellsworth's papers were discovered among the family papers of the Goodrich family. Ellsworth was a Yale classmate of Chauncey Allen Goodrich,[19] whose sister Nancy Henry Leavitt Ellsworth married. The journal of Ellsworth's first trip to New Connecticut came to the Yale University Library as part of the Goodrich Family Collection. The former patent commissioner's papers today make up the Henry Leavitt Ellsworth Papers at Yale's Sterling Library. Annie Goodrich Ellsworth, only daughter of Henry Leavitt Ellsworth, married the publisher Roswell Smith, who with his partner Josiah Gilbert Holland founded, in partnership with the publishing house Charles Scribner & Co., Scribner's Monthly and St. Nicholas magazines.[20] Later Smith founded the publishing house The Century Company, and assumed sole ownership of both magazines. He changed the name of Scribner's Monthly to The Century. His wife, the former Anna G. Ellsworth, dictated the inaugural message on Samuel F. B. Morse's new telegraph system. "What hath God wrought" read the message, suggested by her mother, the wife of Morse's great champion Henry Leavitt Ellsworth.[21][22] The daughter of Roswell Smith and Anna G. Leavitt married the American artist landscape painter George Inness, Jr.[23]

 
Text of the first telegraph message sent by Samuel F. B. Morse. Presented to Miss Annie G. Ellsworth, daughter of Henry Leavitt Ellsworth. Annie's ink tracing over Morse's pencilled letters. Gift to Library of Congress by Mrs. George Inness, daughter of Annie Ellsworth

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Among the gifts and bequests made by Ellsworth to Yale was the Ellsworth Fund, which paid the tuition of Yale College students intending to enter the ministry.[1]
  2. ^ Biographical Sketches of the Graduates of Yale College, Franklin Bowditch Dexter, Yale University Press, New Haven, 1912
  3. ^ . Archived from the original on 2009-02-28. Retrieved 2008-10-15.
  4. ^ The History of the Descendants of John Dwight, of Dedham, Mass., Benjamin Woodbridge Dwight, New York, 1874
  5. ^ A later family relation was Vermont attorney and photography pioneer Leavitt Hunt, whose full name was Henry Leavitt Hunt, and who was similarly named for his mother's Suffield Leavitt forebears.
  6. ^ The New Connecticut (Ohio) towns of Ellsworth and Windsor were named after the family and its Connecticut home.
  7. ^ Margaret Dwight's manuscript was edited by Max Farrand and published in 1912 as Volume I of the Yale Historical Manuscripts series.
  8. ^ Ellsworth wrote a book about this journey entitled Washington Irving on the Prairie: Or, A Narrative of a Tour of the Southwest in the Year 1832.
  9. ^ Fugitive Poses: Native American Indian Scenes of Absence and Presence, Gerald Robert Vizenor, University of Nebraska Press, 1998
  10. ^ Aristocratic Encounters: European Travelers and North American Indians, Harry Liebersohn, Cambridge University Press, 1998
  11. ^ The Journal of the Union Mission, Hope Holway, University of Oklahoma
  12. ^ A Tour on the Prairies, Washington Irving, Henry G. Bohn, London, 1850
  13. ^ Gunmaker to the World, Ellsavorth S. Grant, American Heritage Magazine, June 1968, americanheritage.com 2008-09-05 at the Wayback Machine
  14. ^ The Story of the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, patentmodelassociation.com
  15. ^ Samuel Sass (May–June 2003). . Skeptical Inquirer. Archived from the original on 2004-09-03.
  16. ^ Samuel Sass, "A Patently False Patent Myth", The Skeptical Inquirer, Spring 1989, vol. 13, pp. 3110-313.
  17. ^ Free Soil Banner (Indianapolis) September 15, 1848.
  18. ^ The Connecticut Magazine: An Illustrated Monthly, William Farrand Felch, Vol. I, January, 1895, Hartford
  19. ^ Chauncey Allen Goodrich was also the brother-in-law of William Wolcott Ellsworth, Henry Leavitt's brother. Goodrich and Ellsworth had both married daughters of dictionary publisher Noah Webster.
  20. ^ Oliver Ellsworth, the son of William W. Ellsworth, twin brother of Henry Leavitt Ellsworth, married Caroline Cleveland Smith, whose first cousin was Roswell Smith, who married Anna G. Leavitt, Oliver's first cousin. Oliver Ellsworth's son William Webster Ellsworth went into the Century Company publishing business with Roswell Smith, where he helped publish the Century Dictionary.[2]
  21. ^ The Twentieth Century Biographical Dictionary of Notable Americans, Rossiter Johnson (ed.), Vol. IX, The Biographical Society, Boston, 1904
  22. ^ First Telegraph Message, 24 May 1844, Library of Congress, Washington, D.C.
  23. ^ A Memorial of the Opening of the Ellsworth Homestead at Windsor, Connecticut, Connecticut Daughters of the American Revolution, Tuttle, Morehouse & Taylor Co., 1903

External links edit

  • "Henry L. Ellsworth Circular, 1837" (PDF). Indiana Historical Society. 1993-05-21. Retrieved 2012-11-05.
  • Henry Leavitt Ellsworth, National Agricultural Hall of Fame
  • Henry Leavitt Ellsworth Papers (MS 196). Manuscripts and Archives, Yale University Library.
  • 500 Farmers Wanted, Advertisement for Land Sale by Henry Leavitt Ellsworth, Lafayette, Indiana, April 29, 1847, Connecticut History Online
  • Henry Leavitt Ellsworth, of Connecticut, New York Public Library Digital Gallery

Further reading edit

  • A Tour to New Connecticut in 1811: The Narrative of Henry Leavitt Ellsworth, Henry Leavitt Ellsworth, Phillip R. Shriver (ed.), Volume I of the Western Reserve History Studies Series, The Western Reserve Historical Society, Cleveland, 1985
  • Washington Irving on the Prairie: Or, A Narrative of a Tour of the Southwest in the Year 1832, Henry Leavitt Ellsworth, (edited by Stanley Thomas Williams and Barbara Damon Simison), American Book Company, 1937
  • A Letter on the Cultivation of the Prairies, Hon. H. L. Ellsworth, Published by S. Augustus Mitchell, Philadelphia, 1837
  • Improvements in Agriculture, Arts, & C. of the United States, Hon. Henry L. Ellsworth, Greeley & McElrath, New York, 1843

henry, leavitt, ellsworth, november, 1791, december, 1858, yale, educated, attorney, became, first, commissioner, patent, office, where, encouraged, innovation, inventors, samuel, morse, samuel, colt, ellsworth, also, served, second, president, aetna, insuranc. Henry Leavitt Ellsworth November 10 1791 December 27 1858 was a Yale educated attorney who became the first Commissioner of the U S Patent Office where he encouraged innovation by inventors Samuel F B Morse and Samuel Colt Ellsworth also served as the second president of the Aetna Insurance Company and was a major donor to Yale College 1 a commissioner to Indian tribes on the western frontier and the founder of what became the United States Department of Agriculture Henry Leavitt EllsworthHenry Leavitt Ellsworth first Commissioner of the U S Patent Office founder United States Department of AgricultureBorn 1791 11 10 November 10 1791 Windsor ConnecticutDiedDecember 27 1858 1858 12 27 aged 67 Fair Haven ConnecticutNationalityAmericanOccupationAttorneyKnown forFirst Commissioner of the U S Patent OfficePolitical partyFree Soil PartyChildren3 including HenryRelativesOliver Ellsworth father William W Ellsworth brother Elizur Goodrich father in law Contents 1 Early life 2 Travels 3 Patent Office 4 Legacy 5 See also 6 References 7 External links 8 Further readingEarly life editEllsworth was born in Windsor Connecticut son of Founding Father and Chief Justice Oliver Ellsworth and Abigail Wolcott Ellsworth graduated from Yale University in 1810 and studied law at Tapping Reeve s Litchfield Law School in 1811 2 3 On June 22 1813 he married Nancy Allen Goodrich daughter of Congressman Judge New Haven Mayor and longtime Secretary of the Yale Corporation Elizur Goodrich and his wife Anne Willard Allen with whom Ellsworth had three children including son Henry W Ellsworth Later in life he had two subsequent wives Marietta Mariana Bartlett and Catherine Smith Ellsworth was named in part for his grandmother s family the Leavitts of Suffield Connecticut 4 5 After studying law under Judge Gould in Litchfield Connecticut he settled first at Windsor and then at Hartford where he remained for a decade Travels editIn 1811 when he was 19 years old and a freshly minted Yale graduate Ellsworth undertook the first of several western trips during his lifetime Ellsworth traveled by horseback to the Connecticut Western Reserve in present day Ohio to investigate family lands in the region Ellsworth s father Oliver Ellsworth had purchased over 41 000 acres 170 km2 in the Western Reserve including most of present day Cleveland joining with other prominent Connecticut men snapping up over three million acres 12 000 km2 sold by the state of Connecticut 6 Among the eight original purchasers was a family relation merchant Thaddeus Leavitt of Suffield Ellsworth wrote a small uneven book about his experiences entitled A Tour to New Connecticut in 1811 Ellsworth s mission was straightening out irregularities in land sales by the family agent It was an arduous trip Along the way Ellsworth made note of attractive vistas rowdy drunks solicitous innkeepers and his disappointment in places of which he had heard like Erie The journey s rigors were relieved by a meeting with his old friend Margaret Dwight daughter of Yale president Timothy Dwight IV who was visiting family in present day Warren Ohio Here too wrote Ellsworth I met with my good old friend Margaret Dwight we sat down and passed a few hours in social chat Dwight wrote her own account of her Western Reserve trip A Journey to Ohio in 1810 7 Over twenty years later in 1832 Ellsworth traveled west again this time as U S Commissioner of Indian Tribes in Arkansas and Oklahoma 8 President Andrew Jackson appointed Ellsworth one of three commissioners to study the country to mark the boundaries to pacify the warring Indians and in general to establish order and justice after Congress s passage of the 1830 Indian Removal Act Ellsworth travelled to Fort Gibson to investigate the situation Some critics blame Ellsworth for being complicit in the subsequent removal of Native Americans to Indian Territory present day Oklahoma particularly since Ellsworth s appointment and subsequent western trip followed the Indian Removal Act Andrew Jackson s first significant act as president Other historians note Ellsworth s sympathetic outlook towards the tribes 9 nbsp Oliver Ellsworth Homestead Windsor Connecticut birthplace of Henry Leavitt Ellsworth National Historic Landmark Along the way Ellsworth made stops in Cincinnati and Louisville then traveled on to St Louis Missouri where he met with explorer William Clark and saw the recently captured Native American leader Black Hawk chief of the Sauk people Leavitt s mission was a complicated one he was charged with trying to mediate between the conflicting claims of several Indian tribes who were being forced into an ever smaller area in competition with newer immigrants and the interests of the Chouteau family the powerful St Louis magnates of the Midwestern fur trade 10 Ellsworth was accompanied on the expedition by three companions author Washington Irving who recorded his impressions in A Tour on the Prairies Charles La Trobe an Englishman mountaineer and travel writer who later served in the British diplomatic corps in the West Indies and Australia and Swiss Count Albert Pourtales 11 Washington Irving wrote of Henry Leavitt Ellsworth this worthy leader of our little band He was a native of one of the towns of Connecticut a man in whom a course of legal practice and political life had not been able to vitiate an innate simplicity and benevolence of heart The greater part of his days had been passed in the bosom of his family and the society of deacons elders and statesmen on the peaceful banks of the Connecticut when suddenly he had been called to mount his steed shoulder his rifle and mingle among stark hunters backwoodsmen and naked savages on the trackless wilds of the Far West 12 Patent Office editIn 1835 Ellsworth was elected mayor of Hartford Connecticut but had served only a month when he was appointed the first Commissioner of the U S Patent Office an office he held for ten years from 1835 until 1845 His twin brother William W Ellsworth was Governor of Connecticut from 1838 to 1842 and served as a U S Congressman from Connecticut as well William Wolcott Ellsworth was married to the daughter of Noah Webster the publisher of the eponymous dictionaries When he arrived at the Patent Office Ellsworth found one third of the floor space in his office occupied by over 60 models of inventions he moved them to a separate room He also found that no list of patent applicants had ever been drawn up a deficiency he soon corrected nbsp Broadside advertising sale by Ellsworth of parcels of his western lands Lafayette Indiana 1847 Acting as Patent Commissioner Ellsworth made a decision that profoundly affected the future of Hartford and Connecticut The young Samuel Colt was struggling to establish a firm to manufacture his new revolver Ellsworth became interested in Colt s invention and in 1836 made the decision to issue Colt U S Patent No 138 On the basis of Ellsworth s decision Colt was able to raise some 200 000 from investors to incorporate the Patent Arms Manufacturing Company of Paterson New Jersey the forerunner of the mighty Colt arms manufacturing empire 13 In today s world Ellsworth would be described as an early technology adapter He became so interested for instance in a new fangled invention by Samuel Morse called the telegraph that Ellsworth petitioned Congress for a 30 000 grant to test the possibilities of the technology 14 From Ellsworth s exposure to the West and knowledge of inventions he prophesied late in life that the lands of the West would be cultivated by means of steam plows This prophecy was introduced in the probate of his will in an attempt to prove that he was of unsound mind Ellsworth was proven correct of course and his interest in agriculture during his time as Patent Commissioner induced Congress in 1839 to appropriate the first monies for farming which were used to collect seeds from foreign countries and distribute them through the United States post office as Ellsworth had urged By 1845 Ellsworth s patent office was performing the functions of a full fledged agricultural bureau For this accomplishment Ellsworth earned the sobriquet Father of the United States Department of Agriculture A comment by Ellsworth about the increased workload at the patent office taken out of context and embellished was apparently the source of an urban legend that a patent office official Charles H Duell in some versions claimed that everything which could be invented had already been invented 15 In his 1843 report to Congress Ellsworth stated The advancement of the arts from year to year taxes our credulity and seems to presage the arrival of that period when human improvement must end The report then lists a record number of patents implying his comment was intended to be humorous 16 Following Ellsworth s stint in the Patent Office he settled in Lafayette Indiana acting as an agent for purchase and settlement of public land but in 1857 he returned to Connecticut While in Indiana he served as a presidential elector on the Free Soil Party ticket in 1848 17 Ellsworth later served as an early president of the Aetna Insurance Company He was an early benefactor of Yale College donating some 700 000 to his alma mater as well as title to the Ellsworth lands in the former Western Reserve 18 Legacy edit nbsp The Morse Telegraph one of many inventions championed by Henry Leavitt Ellsworth Ellsworth died aged 67 on December 27 1858 in Fair Haven Connecticut Following his death Ellsworth s papers were discovered among the family papers of the Goodrich family Ellsworth was a Yale classmate of Chauncey Allen Goodrich 19 whose sister Nancy Henry Leavitt Ellsworth married The journal of Ellsworth s first trip to New Connecticut came to the Yale University Library as part of the Goodrich Family Collection The former patent commissioner s papers today make up the Henry Leavitt Ellsworth Papers at Yale s Sterling Library Annie Goodrich Ellsworth only daughter of Henry Leavitt Ellsworth married the publisher Roswell Smith who with his partner Josiah Gilbert Holland founded in partnership with the publishing house Charles Scribner amp Co Scribner s Monthly and St Nicholas magazines 20 Later Smith founded the publishing house The Century Company and assumed sole ownership of both magazines He changed the name of Scribner s Monthly to The Century His wife the former Anna G Ellsworth dictated the inaugural message on Samuel F B Morse s new telegraph system What hath God wrought read the message suggested by her mother the wife of Morse s great champion Henry Leavitt Ellsworth 21 22 The daughter of Roswell Smith and Anna G Leavitt married the American artist landscape painter George Inness Jr 23 nbsp Text of the first telegraph message sent by Samuel F B Morse Presented to Miss Annie G Ellsworth daughter of Henry Leavitt Ellsworth Annie s ink tracing over Morse s pencilled letters Gift to Library of Congress by Mrs George Inness daughter of Annie EllsworthSee also editPatent Office 1877 fire Patent Office 1836 fireReferences edit Among the gifts and bequests made by Ellsworth to Yale was the Ellsworth Fund which paid the tuition of Yale College students intending to enter the ministry 1 Biographical Sketches of the Graduates of Yale College Franklin Bowditch Dexter Yale University Press New Haven 1912 Litchfield Law School Students Litchfield Historical Society litchfieldhistoricalsociety org Archived from the original on 2009 02 28 Retrieved 2008 10 15 The History of the Descendants of John Dwight of Dedham Mass Benjamin Woodbridge Dwight New York 1874 A later family relation was Vermont attorney and photography pioneer Leavitt Hunt whose full name was Henry Leavitt Hunt and who was similarly named for his mother s Suffield Leavitt forebears The New Connecticut Ohio towns of Ellsworth and Windsor were named after the family and its Connecticut home Margaret Dwight s manuscript was edited by Max Farrand and published in 1912 as Volume I of the Yale Historical Manuscripts series Ellsworth wrote a book about this journey entitled Washington Irving on the Prairie Or A Narrative of a Tour of the Southwest in the Year 1832 Fugitive Poses Native American Indian Scenes of Absence and Presence Gerald Robert Vizenor University of Nebraska Press 1998 Aristocratic Encounters European Travelers and North American Indians Harry Liebersohn Cambridge University Press 1998 The Journal of the Union Mission Hope Holway University of Oklahoma A Tour on the Prairies Washington Irving Henry G Bohn London 1850 Gunmaker to the World Ellsavorth S Grant American Heritage Magazine June 1968 americanheritage com Archived 2008 09 05 at the Wayback Machine The Story of the U S Patent and Trademark Office patentmodelassociation com Samuel Sass May June 2003 A Patently False Patent Myth still Skeptical Inquirer Archived from the original on 2004 09 03 Samuel Sass A Patently False Patent Myth The Skeptical Inquirer Spring 1989 vol 13 pp 3110 313 Free Soil Banner Indianapolis September 15 1848 The Connecticut Magazine An Illustrated Monthly William Farrand Felch Vol I January 1895 Hartford Chauncey Allen Goodrich was also the brother in law of William Wolcott Ellsworth Henry Leavitt s brother Goodrich and Ellsworth had both married daughters of dictionary publisher Noah Webster Oliver Ellsworth the son of William W Ellsworth twin brother of Henry Leavitt Ellsworth married Caroline Cleveland Smith whose first cousin was Roswell Smith who married Anna G Leavitt Oliver s first cousin Oliver Ellsworth s son William Webster Ellsworth went into the Century Company publishing business with Roswell Smith where he helped publish the Century Dictionary 2 The Twentieth Century Biographical Dictionary of Notable Americans Rossiter Johnson ed Vol IX The Biographical Society Boston 1904 First Telegraph Message 24 May 1844 Library of Congress Washington D C A Memorial of the Opening of the Ellsworth Homestead at Windsor Connecticut Connecticut Daughters of the American Revolution Tuttle Morehouse amp Taylor Co 1903External links edit Henry L Ellsworth Circular 1837 PDF Indiana Historical Society 1993 05 21 Retrieved 2012 11 05 Henry Leavitt Ellsworth National Agricultural Hall of Fame Henry Leavitt Ellsworth Papers MS 196 Manuscripts and Archives Yale University Library 500 Farmers Wanted Advertisement for Land Sale by Henry Leavitt Ellsworth Lafayette Indiana April 29 1847 Connecticut History Online Henry Leavitt Ellsworth of Connecticut New York Public Library Digital GalleryFurther reading editA Tour to New Connecticut in 1811 The Narrative of Henry Leavitt Ellsworth Henry Leavitt Ellsworth Phillip R Shriver ed Volume I of the Western Reserve History Studies Series The Western Reserve Historical Society Cleveland 1985 Washington Irving on the Prairie Or A Narrative of a Tour of the Southwest in the Year 1832 Henry Leavitt Ellsworth edited by Stanley Thomas Williams and Barbara Damon Simison American Book Company 1937 A Letter on the Cultivation of the Prairies Hon H L Ellsworth Published by S Augustus Mitchell Philadelphia 1837 Improvements in Agriculture Arts amp C of the United States Hon Henry L Ellsworth Greeley amp McElrath New York 1843 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Henry Leavitt Ellsworth amp oldid 1216229783, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.