William H. Honey

Male Abt 1811 - 1868  (57 years)


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  • Name William H. Honey  [1, 2
    Born Abt 1811  NH Find all individuals with events at this location  [1
    Gender Male 
    Died 1868  Fond du Lac, Fond du Lac, Wisconsin, USA Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Person ID I1468  Paul's Tree
    Last Modified 2 Jul 2018 

    Family Martha Ann Brown,   b. May 1812, NY? Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. Aft 1900, Nebraska Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age > 89 years) 
    Married 23 Jan 1832  Lowell, Ma. Find all individuals with events at this location  [3
    Last Modified 2 Jul 2018 
    Family ID F900  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

  • Event Map
    Link to Google MapsDied - 1868 - Fond du Lac, Fond du Lac, Wisconsin, USA Link to Google Earth
     = Link to Google Earth 

  • Notes 
    • Copied from Manitowoc Co. WI site on rootsweb:
      WILLIAM HONEY
      from the Manitowoc Co. Tribune
      July 19, 1877
      DIED:
      HONEY.---On Saturday July 14, 1877, in the town of Gibson, Manitowoc
      county, after a long sickness, Mr. WM. B. D. HONEY, in the 74th year of
      his age.
      Mr. Honey was one of the oldest settlers in Manitowoc county and was widely
      known all over the county. (His stone is no longer in the cemetery.)

      From "Early Days in Two Rivers, WII" Arthur Lohman, 1909
      Chapter VII - THE CHAIR FACTORY

      But it was its woodworking industries that was to give the settlement its
      permanency and make it known from one end of the land to the other and for
      that matter throughout the civilized world in time. It was the timber and
      saw mills that paved the way for the first woodworking manufacturers and
      it was these early beginnings on which the foundation of the city of today
      was gradually built.
      But before we proceed it might be well to make the point that long before
      ever white man set his foot on these grounds, Two Rivers had been a manu-
      facturing site. On the French or east side the piles of flint chips broken
      or chipped from flint rocks as they were being shaped into arrows and other
      stone implements are abundant evidence that here was the site of an ancient
      industry. Mingled with the piles of chips of all sizes and colors, arrow
      heads, some perfect, some broken in the course of manufacture can be found.
      Besides this, fragments of pottery and the bones of the dead give mute
      evidence that a permanent site of abode existed here for years before the
      advent of the white man. But it is with the modern settlement that we are
      dealing. Up to this time, viz.: 1850, there were no manufacturing industries
      here except that in a sense saw mills might come under that classification.
      But no finished goods were made here and the saw mills would only forshadow
      the end unless manufacturing institutions located here.
      Through the assistance of Mr. C.H. Albers who was the first superintendent
      of the pail factory here, we were enabled to obtain a great deal of infor-
      mation relative to the first woodworking industry here, this being the
      manufacture of chairs by the New England Mfg. Co.
      The following items relative to the chair factory were obtained from Mrs.
      Elizabeth A. Jennison, of Omaha, Neb., a daughter of the first superintendent,
      William Honey (photo). This Wm. Honey was murdered at Fond du Lac, Wis., in the
      Winter of 1868, where he was then engaged in the poultry business. His
      widow is now living in Omaha at the age of 95 years, and in the enjoyment
      of fair health and all of her faculties, excepting being nearly blind.
      The chair factory was built in the Summer of 1856 by the New England Mfg.
      Co. The company was composed of Aldrich Smith & Co. of Two Rivers, Wm.
      Honey, Thomas Burns, Charles Jennison, and probably Alanson Hall of Massa-
      chusetts. Mr. Honey was superintendent of the sawing out of the stock and
      the preparation of the stock for use, Charles Jennison of the chair and
      furniture making, and Thomas Burns of the painting and finishing of the
      manufactured articles, and Mr. Hall worked at painting in the factory.
      Mr. Jennison gave up the superintendency of the chair making department
      in 1858 or 59 and was succeeded by Wm. Johnson. The hard times of 1857
      and 58 were disastrous to the New England Mfg. Co. and the property came into
      the hands of Aldrich, Smith & Co. and their successors. In 1859 John N. Burns
      (a son of Thomas Burns), rented the property and assumed the operation of the
      factory. Mr. Geo. Simonds of Newbury, Ohio, succeeded Mr. Johnson as superin-
      tendent of the chair making department. John H. Burns operated the works until
      after 1862 and it was operated by Joseph Mann (photo) soon after he came to Two Rivers.
      Mr. Honey remained with the factory until about 1864. Mr. J.B. Lord of
      Gardner, Mass., writes as follows: "I arrived in Two Rivers in the month of
      September, 1856, the chair factory buildings being built and most of the
      machinery installed. The engine was made in Fitchburg, Mass., and was shipped
      to Two Rivers by propeller from Buffalo late in the Fall of 1856, but was
      caught at Mackinaw in the ice and did not arrive at its destination until
      early in the Spring of 1857.
      When part of the machinery was in running order, Geo. W. Honey (a son of
      Wm. Honey), and myself made, partly by hand, the first chairs, some office
      chairs for the Lake House."
      Geo. W. Honey is now holding some U.S. Government position in Washington,
      D.C., and Mr. Lord is employed in one of the large chair factories in
      Gardner, Mass., to which city he went immediately after the close of the
      war, he having been a member of the 27th Wis. Regiment, in which he enlisted
      in 1862.

      1860 WI Census Manitowoc, Two Rivers Ward 2
      William H Honey 46 M Chairmaker NH
      Martha A. 45 F NY
      Lizzie A. 23 F Mass
      Carrie A. 21 F Maine
      Albert A. 10 M Mass

  • Sources 
    1. [S333] 1860 United States Federal Census, Ancestry.com, (Name: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc.; Location: Provo, UT, USA; Date: 2009;), Database online. Year: 1860; Census Place: Two Rivers Ward 2, Manitowoc, Wisconsin; Roll: ; Page: 870; Image: 548.
      Record for William H Honey

    2. [S382] 1840 United States Federal Census, Ancestry.com, (Name: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc.; Location: Provo, UT, USA; Date: 2010;), Database online. Year: 1840; Census Place: Augusta, Kennebec, Maine; Roll: ; Page: .
      Record for William H Honey

    3. [S26] "Lowell Journel" 1/30/1832.
      Married, In this town on Monday 23d January by Rev. John McLeish Mr. William Honey to Miss Martha Ann Brown, both of Lowell


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