1. Emily, born at Scriba, N. Y., 21 May, 1835. 2. William Henry, born at Smithfield, N. Y., 12 Feb., 1840; lives in San Francisco, Cal.; unmarried; now in company with W. W. Bowers in the Bee business. 3. Almira, born at Oswego, N. Y., 8 March, 1850. 4. Alvin, born at Oswego, N. Y., 1 April, 1853, died 8 May, 1855. 5. Nora, born at Oswego, N. Y., 27 August, 1857. 6. Celia, born 8 Sept., 1861; died 20 Sept., 1863.
XV. Fidelia, daughter of Dea. [Ezra Horton and Olive May], born at Union, Ct., 5 Jan., 1809; married at Smithfield, N. Y., 15 Sept., 1835, Thomas Moore, of Smithfield, N. Y., son of Thomas Moore, of Union, Ct., and born at Union, Ct., 6 Oct., 1806; died at Smithfield, N. Y., 5 July, 1853. She died 13 June, 1844.
Children, born at Smithfield:
1. Florilla, born 10 July, 1836; married Rev. Gordon Moore, son of Dr. James Moore, of Stockbridge, N. Y. 2. Franklin, born 3 Nov., 1843; married 28 June, 1870, Mary M. Clark.
II. Dr. William, son of [Wm. Horton and Phebe Rumsey] (Silas, Dea. James, Jonathan I.), born in Goshen, N. Y., 16 May, 1796; died in Goshen, at the age of 47 years. He married 9 April, 1817, Maria Ryneck, of Schenectady.
Children, all born in Goshen:
1. [Silas Ryneck]. 2. [Eugene]. 3. [William]. 4. Egbert, died young. 5. Emily, married J. J. Dobson. 6. Margaret, married S. W. Teddel. 7. Charlotte, married Jesse E. Moffat. 8. Gertrude, married Brown C. Ward.
At the age of 18 the Doctor entered the junior class at Union College, and he was soon distinguished for his close application to his studies and strict regard for integrity. After his collegiate course, he studied medicine, and attended medical lectures in the medical department of the University of New York, during the palmy days of Mitchell and Hosack, and like these eminent teachers, he cultivated a taste for patient, cautious and bold investigation, which afterwards made him so distinguished and successful in the medical profession.
He commenced the practice of medicine at the residence of his father, and he soon possessed the confidence of the people and secured a large practice. He afterwards moved to the village of Goshen, and soon became a prominent man among his medical brethren, and, though young, he was nevertheless called upon to perform all the difficult and grave surgical operations occurring in the village, and also in the surrounding country. He was a good surgeon, but he was still more celebrated as a physician. By his skill and honorable bearing, he early secured the confidence of his medical brethren, and he was frequently called in consultation with the aged and experienced physicians of his day. He was remarkably successful in the treatment of fevers, carefully studying their pathology at the bedside, and also by post-mortem examinations, and in his views he was greatly in advance of the profession of his day. He prepared with great labor a work on fevers, but never published it. His pamphlet on Dysentery, and his Geological Reports, are his only published works, and these are sufficient to establish his reputation as a profound thinker and a clear and powerful writer.
At the bedside he was cheerful, affectionate and soothing, and always dignified. In his intercourse with his medical brethren he was always honorable, and in harmony with the code of medical ethics.