Alpena County History

 

 

 

 

Alpena County, Michigan

 

 

 

We especially want to thank Nelson Herron for allowing us to

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Nelson Herron's Website

 

Huston Family in Alpena County, Michigan

According to Franklin Warren Houston of North Middleton, Kentucky, (as recorded in E. Rankin Huston's "History of the Huston Families") the names Huston and Houston jointly descend from Robert House-son of Dublin who was born July 5, 1450.  The name is supposedly of some Celtic origin, but that part is not explained.  Robert's son John, born in 1475, was sent to St. Andrew's College, Scotland where he subsequently held a position of languages instructor.  John House-son's son Samuel was born September 3, 1523 and eventually took his father's position at St. Andrew's when John House-son died.  Samuel House-son had two sons Alfred, born September 6, 1572, and Abnor, born October 10, 1577.  With the Reformation and its attendant wars and religious discrimination raging through Europe, the House-sons decided to hide their ancestry by changing their names.  Alfred chose Houston and Abnor chose Huston.  They married twin daughters of Welch Sconce, an Aberdeen merchant, on  January 13, 1607.  Alfred married Ruth and Abnor married Rachel.  On April 12, 1612 Alfred Houston and his family moved to the Jamestown Plantation.  He was an adherent to the teachings of the reformer John Knox, and he became the Knox doctrine preacher in Jamestown.  Alfred convinced his brother Abnor to leave his mercantile business in Wales, Corwon, Scotland and join the Jamestown Colony.  Abnor Huston and his family sailed for Jamestown on September 3, 1616.

In Jamestown Abnor Huston met John Rolfe of Pocahontas fame.  Abnor combined his own business background with Rolfe's background with the colonists, the local Indians, and their agriculture, and they jointly formed a company to sell colonial tobacco in England along with potatoes and Indian furs, all of which were in high demand in England, Ireland, and continental Europe.  Abnor and Rachel Huston had three sons who all married on Christmas day 1633.  Joseph married Jane Lennox, John married Margaret Hathaway, and Samuel Married Rachel Alexander.  Joseph, Samuel, and their respective families moved to Fairfax, VA.  From there three of their sons moved back to Ireland.  It is a matter of speculation that the Irish Hustons who subsequently immigrated to Canada from Ireland were descended from these three sons.  In 1654 the third son, John Huston, moved his family to the place where Philadelphia would be started by William Penn.  He helped Penn survey his land grant and became influential in that community.  E. Rankin Huston believes that all of the old Hustons in America are descended this John Huston.  Our branch of the Hustons, if they are indeed related to this family are related through the three sons who moved back to Ireland, only to return to the States almost two hundred years later.  There is further evidence that in between these two times, a John Huston emigrated from Ireland in 1735 to Cumberland Co., PA.  He had a son Robert Huston who married a Margaret Davidson.  They had a son Samuel Huston who married an Elizabeth Paxton.  Sometime after the family moved to Virginia they changed the spelling of their name to Houston that was used by their distant relatives who still lived in the Shenandoah Valley, descendents of Alfred Houston.  Their son was Samuel Houston, who had a town in Texas named after him.

The Huston family I know of came originally from the north of Ireland, and they settled for a time in Thurso, Quebec, between Lachute and Ottowa on the Ottowa River.  The patriarch of this clan in North America was named Joseph Huston, and he brought his family over the pond in the late 1820's.  His son, Robert Huston, married Letticia Edgar in Goderich, Ontario, about 45 miles northwest of Stratford, Ontario on the Lake Huron shoreline.  They moved their family to the Ida Grove, Iowa area in 1878 after an eight year stopover in Alpena, Michigan.   The family appears to have been part of a group of families named Huston that also moved to the Stratford area, and they all appear to have recycled the names Robert, Joseph, and Samuel in wild profusion.  Members of the Stratford Hustons are know to have moved separately to the southern Michigan area, and I have a photo of an R.J. Huston, dated Bay City (MI. ?), Oct. 21, 1889 but bearing a Stratford, Ont. photographer's mark (Maitland, Market Square, Stratford, Ont.).  This R. J. Huston is unknown to our family.  To make things more difficult, some of the families appear to have thought that the rest of the family didn't know how to spell and changed the spelling to Houston.  As far as I can tell, none of them used the Heuston spelling used in Ireland, as in Heuston Station, the train station in Dublin.

The Huston family in Alpena County, Michigan began with Joseph Edgar Huston (Edgar was his maternal grandfather's last name, and he shared his middle name with a number of brothers and nephews).  He moved back to Alpena County in about 1880 from Ida Grove, Iowa to work in the lumber camps (he appears in the 1880 census in Alpena).  He worked for the Richardson lumber company and met Annie McDade who was a cook in the camp.  They were married and my grandfather's older brother Victor were born in Alpena.  In the early 1890's they returned to the farm in Iowa.  After one to two years in Iowa, Annie McDade's brother Tom McDade, who was a well-known Alpena lumberman and part-owner of the Richardson lumber company, told them they could buy a farm on the Richardson lands.  It was a piece of land near where M-32 crosses the North Branch of the Thunder Bay River about six miles east of Hillman.

Joe and Annie Huston's surviving son Thomas Merrick (another characteristic family name) was born, I believe, in Iowa in 1891, but he lived in Alpena County almost his entire life.  He married Elsie Munns, a young English immigrant, and they had two children, my mother Catherine and her younger brother Robert Joseph (again).  Grandpa Merrick died quite young in 1928 when my mother was seven years old and uncle Bob was five.  As a consequence I have only second-hand knowledge of him.  My grandmother re-married to James ("Jimmie") James who was the person I knew as grandpa.

Nelson R. Herron  

Robert Huston's Family

Most of this information came from Pat Hewitt who obtained it from aunt Ruby Huston

Grandparents: Robert and Susanah Huston

Pat is not sure how aunt Ruby Huston came by this information or whether it is true.  This is about as far back as we can trace the family.  Perhaps one day in Ireland I'll venture to the North and see if I can find anything.

Parents: Joseph Huston and Honor McCullough

Joseph was born about 1810 in Ireland.  He married Honor McCluulough who died on 1\18\1875.   He married a second time to Rebecca Campbell on 10/9/1875.   Joseph died 12\5\1881.  (All links are to the same page)

Ann Huston

Born about 1828.  Currently, 2/3/2006, no other information is known about her

Robert Huston: the hero of the saga

m. Letitia Edgar, 4/2/1858

Born 8/14/1830 according to his obituary.  Letticia Edgar Huston died 9/8/1903, in Ida Grove, Iowa, and Robert Huston died 8/27/1913, in Ida Grove, Iowa also.

James Huston

m. 1) Hattie Andrews, 7/17/1872, Goderich and 2) Betha Andrews, Goderich

Born 3/15/1845, Chatham, Quebec.  Died 5/19/1922 in Manitou, Manitoba.  He ran a shoe store and was postmaster.  He served one term in parliament.  Notes from my cousin Ann Huston, possibly from James Huston the math professor from Boston indicated under Thomas Huston, below, indicate two children: Eva and Charles.  Pat Hewitt says that she heard James's son Charles was a law professor at "Leland Stanford University."  The Stanford law school historical web page indeed shows a Charles Andrews Huston was the third dean of the law school  (Charles Andrews Huston 1916-1922) and during World War I he was granted a leave of absence to "serve in Washington." See: http://www.law.stanford.edu/about/history/ 

Thomas Huston:

m. Maria Thompson, Fermanagh County, Ireland, 1886

 

Information from Pat Hewitt has Thomas born October, 1832 in Chatham, Quebec and that he died in 1912.  Thomas and Maria Huston had at least two sons, William J. and Wesley, who are mentioned in Robert Huston’s will on line 8.  Pat Hewitt also mentions them in her letter to Paul Houston: "Joseph's son Thomas, who married Maria Thompson of Fermanagh Co., Ireland had Thomas Wesley, b. 19 May, 1889 and William John, b. 16 Sep., 1893, who married Edith Howard. This was per a letter from said William John, some years ago, who became a minister. This was, he said, because of some money from his uncle Robert that allowed him to go to seminary."  

His grandson (I believe) is James Huston who was in contact with my uncle Robert Joseph Huston about ten or fifteen years ago.  It was a brief contact, and we no longer know of his whereabouts. He was a mathematics professor at some college in Boston.  The notes my cousin Ann Huston obtained from him indicate his father may have been the Wesley mentioned above.

Catherine Huston

Born 1836.  Possibly married to a Reid.

Susanah Huston

Born 5/4/1854 in Canada, married Nathan Levey about 1885 and died in Tulare, Californian on 2/15/1943.  Nathan Levey was born  12/13/1843 in Truxton, NY and died 11/28/1925 in Fresno, California.  His parents were Jacob Levey and Sarah Briggs.  Susanah and Nathan had at least two children: Robert Earl Levey, born 7/12/1888 in Odebolt, Sac, Iowa and died 1/8/1976 in Exeter, California, and Carrie L. Levey who was born 12/1893.  Note that Odebolt is very close to Ida Grove, so at one point they lived near her brother Robert.

William Huston

Born 2/28/1838 in Chatham, Quebec.  Pat Hewitt is suspicious of this birth date

Henry Huston

m. Wilhelmina Steindorf in Thurso, Papineau County, Quebec on 11/22/1872.

Born 2/28/1839.  Pat also says she is suspicious about this birth date. Died 7/2/1919, possibly in Allenton, MI (There are two Allentons in Michigan.  One is in Cass County in the southwest part of the state and one in St. Clair county, north of Detroit.  I have heard some stories that relatives moved to St. Clair, so I am inclined to choose this one if any is appropriate.).  He is supposedly buried in Arkona, Ontario.  His wife Wilhelmina died 7/14/1917.  

Joseph Huston

He is believed to have lived and died in Chicago, and was subsequently buried in Stratford, Ontario.  Pat Hewitt indicates that he married twice.

 

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