Gazlay Family History
 

FamilyAlbert Gallatin Knight

Parents

FatherTimothy Knight (ca. 1780 - )
MotherDolly Rice ( - )

Personal Information

Record Created: 11 December 2010; Last Edited: 3 February 2022 
Person ID1840
NameAlbert Gallatin Knight
GenderMale
Born 28 May 1808 in Brattleboro, Windham County, Vermont1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6
Married 12 November 1832 in Cincinnati, Hamilton County, Ohio to Adelia ‘Della’ Gazlay6, 7, 8
Married 1868 to Anna Hanson6
Died 5 January 1886 in Racine, Racine County, Wisconsin1

Biography

The History of Racine and Kenosha Counties, Wisconsin provides an interesting biographical sketch of Albert G. Knight:6

Albert G. Knight was born in Brattleboro, Vt., in May, 1808; he received the advantages of the Schools of the place, but they were not very extensive; he, however, acquired a taste for solid reading, and literally devoured the few books which were within his reach; soon after reaching his teens, he went to Providence, R.I., and served some years in a large crockery store; he then went to Baltimore and engaged in the same business; from there, he crossed the mountains, and settled in the young town of Cincinnati, where he married Miss Delia Gazlay, soon after which event he removed to Wayne Co., N.Y., and engaged in farming, where he was joined by his parents, his two brothers and only sister; the fever and ague was a little too much for them there, and early in the year 1836, Albert G. started for the West, a solitary horseman, arriving at Chicago the last of March, where he sold his horse and pushed forward to Racine on foot, because at that early season of the year there was no grass, neither hay nor grain on which the animal could be fed, had yet been raised. His sister Mary followed him in May, coming by schooner from Oswego, and the rest of the family, which had been increased by the birth of a daughter, followed, arriving in Racine August 29, 1836, by the same mode of conveyance. As elsewhere stated, there were but few settlers in the clearing known as Racine upon his arrival, and other pages of this work show so much of his relation to public affairs that it is unnecessary to repeat. In 1851, he engaged in the business of making abstracts of title, conveyances, and the like, for which he was eminently fitted. In 1854, he associated with him the late Eliphalet Cram, between whom and himself sprang up the warmest friendship based upon mutual regard. Mr. Cram died in 1868, and the firm of Knight -- Cram was changed to that of Knight -- Whiteley, Mr. Knight’s son-in-law, Simeon Whiteley, having purchased the interest of Mr. Cram in the valuable books of record and other property of the old firm. The business is still carried on by them. It is worthy of note that Mr. Knight’s grandfather, Samuel Knight, was appointed one of the Judges of the Colony of Vermont, by the English crown, his commission as such being one of the heir-looms in the family. During the early part of the Revolutionary war, Judge Knight retained his office under authority of the State of New York, which, history informs us, claimed jurisdiction over Vermont until the State was admitted to the Federation, at which time Judge Knight was made the first Chief Justice of the State, and he remained upon the bench until the time of his death. Mr. Knight’s wife and the mother of his children, died in the year 1858. She was a woman of superior mind and culture, and the deepest piety. The Gazlay family, of which she was a member, were among the first settlers of Cincinnati, her oldest brother, James W., who but recently died at a very advanced age, being one of the representatives in Congress from the Cincinnati District. Another brother, Sayrs, was a prominent clergyman of the straightest sect of the Presbyterian faith, and figured in the celebrated trial of Lyman Beecher, for heresy. Mrs. Knight’s sister, Karenda, is the mother of Rev. Prof. Swing, of Chicago, whose recent trial for the same crime as that of Lyman Beecher is still fresh in memory. Mrs. Knight was the mother of six children--Sayrs G. (now City Surveyor); Jane G. (Mrs. Simeon Whiteley); Mary H. (Mrs. Capt. Chas. E. Jewett--now living in California); John Wesley (now in the West Indies); James Mason (who died in 1874); and Miss Delia (now Third Assistant Principal in the Racine High School). In 1868, Mr. Knight married Miss Anna Hanson, a native of the island of Laaland, in the Baltic Sea, a dependency of the Kingdom of Denmark, who now presides over his present home at the corner of College avenue and Fifteenth street, a charming spot, where good taste adorns and a boundless hospitality is dispensed, as especially the Presiding Elders and Preachers of the Methodist denomination of the Northwest will attest.6

Person/Family

Spouse 1FamilyAdelia ‘Della’ Gazlay (daughter of James Gazlay and Huldah Carter)
Born 14 December 1813 in Cairo, Greene County, New York
Married 12 November 1832 in Cincinnati, Hamilton County, Ohio to Albert Gallatin Knight
Died 18 April 1858 in Racine, Racine County, Wisconsin
  
Children of Albert Gallatin Knight and Adelia ‘Della’ Gazlay:
  
+1.FamilySayrs Gazlay Knight
Born 27 September 1833 in Brattleboro, Windham County, Vermont
Married ca. 1863 to Rebecca Traver
Died 20 May 1903 in Racine, Racine County, Wisconsin
  
+2.FamilyJane G. Knight
Born 3 March 1836 in Huron, Wayne County, New York
Married 1853 in Racine, Racine County, Wisconsin to Simeon Whiteley
Died 11 July 1907 in Racine, Racine County, Wisconsin
  
+3.FamilyMary Huldah Knight
Born 7 September 1843 in Wisconsin
Married 19 January 1869 in Racine, Racine County, Wisconsin to Charles Elam Jewett
  
+4.FamilyJohn Wesley Knight
Born 8 May 1851 in Wisconsin
Married 26 January 1899 in Racine, Racine County, Wisconsin to Cora Luix (née Bliss)
  
5.FamilyJames Mason Knight
Born ca. 1854 in Wisconsin
Died 1874
  
6.FamilyDr. Delia Gazlay Knight
Born ca. 1858 in Wisconsin
  
Spouse 2FamilyAnna Hanson
Born July 1845 in Laaland Island, Denmark
Married 1868 to Albert Gallatin Knight
  

Sources

  1. Wisconsin Deaths and Burials, 1835-1968; Albert G. Knight; died 5 Jan. 1886 in Racine, Wis.; born 28 May 1808 in Vt.; spouse: Anna Knight; father: Timothy Knight; occupation: real estate agent.
  2. U.S. Federal Census, 1850, Wisconsin, Racine County, Town of Racine, Page No. 88, family of Albert G. Knight (42, VT, farmer); Delia G. Knight (36, NY); Sayrs G. Knight (16, VT); Jane Knight (14, NY); Mary H. Knight (6, Wis.); Timothy Knight (69, VT); Dolly Knight (60, VT).
  3. U.S. Federal Census, 1860, Wisconsin, Racine County, City of Racine, Page No. 198, family of Albert G. Knight (52, Vermont, conveyaurio [?]); Sayrs. G. Knight (26, Vermont, lawyer); Mary H. Knight (16, Wis.); John Knight (9, Wis.); James Knight (6, Wis.); Delia Knight (2, Wis.); Simon Whiteley (29, England, printer); Jane K. Whiteley (24, NY).
  4. U.S. Federal Census, 1870, Wisconsin, Racine County, City of Racine, Page No. 376, family of Albert Knight (62, Vermont, land agent); Anna Knight (24, Denmark); James Knight (16, Wis.); Mary Albino (20, Wis., domestic servant).
  5. U.S. Federal Census, 1880, Wisconsin, Racine County, Racine, Enumeration District 162, Page No. 8, family of Albert G. Knight (72, Vermont, abstract office); wife Anna Knight (34, Denmark); son John Knight (29, Wisconsin, fire insurance agent); daughter Delia Knight (22, Wisconsin); servant Marg Cowick (20, Wisconsin, servant).
  6. The History of Racine and Kenosha Counties, Wisconsin, Chicago: Western Historical Company, 1879, page 596, biographical sketch of Albert G. Knight. Digitized by Google and available at Google Books.
  7. Marriage Records, Hamilton County, Ohio, Cincinnati, Ohio: Cincinnati Chapter, D.A.R., 1941. Knigh [sic], Albert G., and Gazley [sic], Delia, married on 12 November 1832.
  8. Gazlay History, written by Spencer G. Kuhn, a grandchild of Theodore Gazlay; undated. This is a typewritten re-compilation of the earlier Genealogy of the Gazlay Family, compiled by Theodore Gazlay in 1890, including the 1852 statement of the family history by Reverend Sayers Gazlay, an elder brother of Theodore. This document re-formats the information in the 1890 work. For example, facts originally shown in list form, such as birth and death dates, are incorporated in the narrative of this later work. Two post-1890 sections are unique to this document: one with additional details about Theodore Gazlay’s family, with dates as late as 1951; and another on the Donaldson family, featuring Jean Gazlay Donaldson and her six marriages, with several dates in 1965.