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Photo Album: Howland and Gorham Descendants (part 1)

Illustration: flag of Nantucket, Massachusetts. Credit: NuclearVacuum; Wikimedia Commons.

Introduction: In this article, Melissa Davenport Berry continues her series about the founders of Nantucket, Massachusetts, and their descendants, showing photos of Howland and Gorham descendants. Melissa is a genealogist who has a website, americana-archives.com, and a Facebook group, New England Family Genealogy and History.

The vast collection of the Nantucket Historical Association (NHA) contains a plethora of old photographs and relics which link to the ancestral lines of Desire (Howland) Gorham, daughter of Mayflower passengers John Howland and Elizabeth Tilley, who married John Gorham.

Gorham Hussey and Lydia Macy

One of my favorite images in the NHA collection is a photogravure print reproduced in a painting by artist Alexander Seaverns entitled A Nantucket Grandmother, depicting the island’s old Quaker lifestyle.

Illustration: “A Nantucket Grandmother,” by Alexander Seaverns. Credit: Nantucket Historical Association.

The woman elder is knitting in a rocking chair by a fireplace. There is a cat sitting at her feet in the foreground with fireplace, spinning wheel, and cupboard in the background.

The subject is Mrs. Lydia Hussey (1798-1885), born Lydia Macy, daughter of Job and Lydia (Gardner) Macy. She married Gorham Hussey (1797-1879), son of George Gorham and Lydia (Chase) Hussey. Gorham Hussey’s journal is housed at NHA.

Gorham Hussey is a 6th generation descendant of John and Desire (Howland) Gorham:

Gorham and Lydia (Macy) Hussey lived at 13 Vestal Street in Nantucket, Massachusetts. The house was built around 1820, the same year their twin daughters Mary and Martha Hussey were born. Mary never married and Martha is the third wife of William McKeel, son of Jesse Mckeel and Amy Quimby.

Photo: 13 Vestal Street, Nantucket, Massachusetts. Credit: Nantucket Historical Association.

Other children born to Gorham and Lydia (Macy) Hussey include:

Photo: Rebecca Chase (Hussey) Wyer. Credit: Nantucket Historical Association.

Captain George Gorham Hussey was master of the packet schooner Heroine that sailed between New Orleans, Gulf Coast ports, and Panama in the late 1840s and early 1850s. In 1850 the ship was detained by the Spanish government under suspicion of smuggling arms into Cuba.

Another drama for Captain Hussey was his involvement in a mutiny case involving the American brig Henry Buck, whose Captain David Woodside was threatened with mutiny by four of his crew.

According to this newspaper report, Captain Hussey assisted Captain Woodside, brought him on board the Heroine, and placed the mutineers in irons until the ship reached safe port. Captain Hussey provided evidence and testimony in the case.

Republic (Washington, D.C.), 13 February 1850, page 3

Captain Hussey’s son-in-law, Henry S. Wyer, gifted a painting of the famous schooner.

Illustration: “The Packet Schr. Heroine, Geo. G. Hussey Master, bound for Chagres, March 22nd, 1850.” Credit: Nantucket Historical Association.
Photo: Hepsibeth Chase Hussey. Credit: Nantucket Historical Association.

My last photo for today is this ambrotype of cousins (left to right): Emily Gardner (1848–1883), daughter of William R. and Susan (Hussey) Gardner; and Rebecca C. Hussey, daughter of George G. and Avis M. Hussey, married Henry S. Wyer.

Photo: (left to right) Emily Gardner and Rebecca Hussey. Credit: Nantucket Historical Association.

Stay tuned for more Howland scions.

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Note on the header image: flag of Nantucket, Massachusetts. Credit: NuclearVacuum; Wikimedia Commons.

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