William Hastings
b. March 4, 1813 in Windham, Vermont
d. February 21, 1896 in Brookline, Vermont
William was born and raised in Windham, VT. He was the oldest son in a brood of
thirteen children. He attended the District School and, at age 20 [1833], left to find
work in Boston, where he remained for a "few seasons." This was probably an
attempt to discover whether there was life beyond the farming ways that his [our] branch
of the family for at least six generations. For better or worse, he eventually realized
that his roots were firmly on the farm.
The Boston of this time was a bustling city of about 50,000. Recovering
from the 1832 fire, it was a city of modern convention and contraption, and a place of
great tension. The latter was manifested by the 1834 anti-[Irish] Catholic riots. Tension
also came from the fact that Boston had become the pulpit for William Lloyd Garrison's
American Abolition Movement. His periodical, "The Liberator", attracted free and
fugitive blacks to a state that had previously had few. Citizens, while sympathetic to
abolition in theory, did not universially embrace this migration. This was a time too of
religious reformation. The more liberal congregationalists, under William E. Channing,
started in 1819 to form a new creed called Unitarianism. Undoubtedly, William considered
this new faith before deciding, as he ultimately did, to stay with the church of his
fore-fathers.
By 1836, William returned to Windham and bought a farm in the adjacent
village called Jamaica. Jamaica had a population of about 1560, making it over twice the
size of tiny Windham. On December 6th of that year, he married Susan Goddard, a daughter
of Enoch and Esther (Bliss) Goddard of
Windham. She was a distant cousin (which he may or may not have known) and a fellow
descendant of old Watertown stock. During the next 16 years they had five children as
follows:
Lydia Ann (1837-1838)
Almon Woodard (1839-1922) who m. Maryette Eliz. Person (1842-1927)
Frances Ann (1842-1919) who m. Charles P. Stickney (1840-1922)
Marion E. (1847-1851)
William H. "Willie" (1852-aft. 1922)
In about 1861, Susan's niece, Sarah Ellen Goddard (1860-1914)
also joined the family. Timothy Goddard had lost his wife, Fannie J. Abbott, shortly after
Sarah's birth and could not care for the infant on his own. Sarah remained with the family
until her marriage to Fred Coombs in 1879.
William was active politically and an "old time" Whig. He was
a founder and officer of Jamaica's West River Bank, formed in 1854. This bank operated for
about 20 years and then reorganized into the Jamaica Savings Bank of which William served
as a Trustee from 1876 until his death. He also served as a Town Selectman.
He farmed 170 acres with his son Willie and another 226 with brothers
Henry and Horatio Felton. Henry was a relatively properous owner of two saw mills in
Jamaica. Along with his farming peers, William was probably a member of the "Patron's
of Husbandry", which met at Jamaica's Sunnyside Grange # 147. In the 1850 census his
estate was valued at $1500.
Jamaica was beset by a number of climatic and political traumas during
his years there. The devastating flood of 1869 did much physical damage and compounded the
town's financial dilemma of leftover Civil War debt. Nationally, money was tight because
of scandals like "Black Friday" (September 1869) and the Credit Mobilier of
America scandal (1873). This put many a hill farmer on the brink of financial ruin since
they traditionally operated, at the best of times, on a very thin margin.
This spate of bad luck, and the seemingly boundless opportunities in
the West (as touted by people like Horace Greely), caused many of Jamaica's young to
strike out to improve their lot. William's son Almon [my great-grandfather] was one, he
left in 1870, stopping for a year in Mozomanie, Wisconsin, (probably staying with his
uncle Bliss Goddard), and eventually buying a farm in near the town of Jefferson in Greene
County, Iowa.
In 1884, William and Susan moved to nearby Brookline to live with
daughter Frances and her husband, Chas. Stickney. They remained there until their deaths.
At 9PM on 21 February 1986, William died suddenly and unexpectedly while on Frances' front
porch heading for the barn. Susan, "a woman of energy and refined taste", died
on 6 May 1900 after a four month illness. In the end, she was cared for by Frances and
Sarah (Goddard) Coombs. William and Susan were laid to rest in Brookline's Riverside
Cemetery.
What you can do to
help save historic Vermont!
Written by: Scott Billigmeier, SBmeier@msn.com.
Sources: Primarily William Hastings' obituary;
Susan Goddard's obituary; Historical Notes, Jamaica, Windham Co, Vermont, by Warren
Booker, 1940; Gazeteer & Business Directory of Windham Co, VT, 1724-1884, by Hamilton
Child, 1884; Vermont Historical Gazetteer, A Local History of All The Towns in The
State..., Vol. V, by Abby M. Hemenway, 1891; and other personal family information.
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