Biddle family

The Biddle family of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania was descended from English immigrants William Biddle (1630–1712) and Sarah Kempe (1634–1709), who arrived in the Province of New Jersey in 1681. Quakers, they had emigrated from England in part to escape religious persecution. Having acquired extensive rights to more than 43,000 acres (170 km2) of lands in West Jersey, they settled first at Burlington, a city which developed along the east side of the Delaware River.[1]

William Biddle, 3rd (1698–1756), and John Biddle (1707–1789), two third-generation brothers, moved from Mount Hope (1684) near Bordentown, also on the east side of the Delaware, to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in the 1720s and 1730s. They constituted the first generation of the Philadelphia Biddle family. The family became prominent in business, political and cultural affairs of the city.[1]

Family members

Branch of William Biddle, 3rd (1698–1756) and Mary Scull (1709–1789)

  • William Biddle, 3rd (1698–1756) and Mary Scull (1709–1790)
    • James Biddle (1731-1797), prothonotary of Philadelphia courts, married Frances Marks
      • Marks John (1765-?), married Jane Dundas
    • Lydia Biddle (1734–1767), married William McFunn (?-1768), captain in the Royal Navy and Governor of the Island of Antigua, West Indies
      • William McFunn Biddle (1764–1809), married Lydia Spencer (1766–1858), daughter of Elihu Spencer, niece of John Berrien and sister-in-law of Jonathan Dickinson Sergeant
        • Lydia Spencer Biddle (1797–1871), married Samuel Baird (1786–1833)
          • Spencer Fullerton Baird (1823-1887), first U.S. Commissioner of Fish and Fisheries and second secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, married Mary Helen Churchill (1846-?)
          • Mary Deborah Baird (1829–1900), endowed Biddle University, married distant cousin Henry Jonathan Biddle (1817–1862) who was a grandson of Clement Biddle
        • Valeria Fullerton Biddle, married Charles Bingham Penrose (1798-1857), Speaker of the Pennsylvania Senate and Solicitor of the United States Treasury
        • William McFunn Biddle, Jr., married Julian Montgomery
        • Mary Elizabeth Dagworthy Biddle (1805-1879), married Maj. George Blaney (1795-1835), captain with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
        • Edward Biddle, married Julia H. Watts
          • David W. Biddle
          • Lydia Spencer Biddle,
          • Charles Penrose Biddle
          • Frederick W. Biddle
          • Edward William Biddle (1852-1931), married Gertrude Dale Bosler[2]
            • Herman Bosler Biddle (1883-1909)
            • Edward McFunn Biddle (1886-?)
          • William McFunn Biddle
    • John "Jacky" Biddle (1736–?) married Sophia Boone
      • Edward Biddle, bought Biddle House on Mackinac Island
      • William Biddle married Abigail Johnson
        • Joseph Cadwalader Biddle (1805–1884) married Elizabeth Cook (died 1899)[3]
          • William Biddle married Anna W.?
            • Frederick Davis Biddle married Estelle Warne Harbeson
              • Eric Harbeson Biddle (1898–1993), businessman and diplomat, assisted Franklin D. Roosevelt during the creation of the United Nations[4][5] and the United Nations Establishment Commissions[6][7][8] (married Katherine Rogers, the daughter of Colonel John I. Rogers).
                • Eric Harbeson Biddle Jr. (1928–2012), CIA Section Chief, later immigration lawyer[9]
                • John "Jack" Biddle
                • Maurice R. Biddle (1932–1999), jazz composer and pianist, also advertising executive in Philadelphia and New York City
    • Edward Biddle (1738–1779), lawyer, soldier, delegate to the Continental Congress,[10] married Elizabeth Ross (sister of George Ross)
    • Charles Biddle (1745–1821), politician and Vice President of the Supreme Council of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, married Hannah Shepard
      • James Biddle (1783–1848), US Navy Commodore
      • Nicholas Biddle (1786–1844), president of the Second Bank of the United States, married Jane Craig
        • Edward Biddle (1815–1873), married Jane Josephine Sarmiento
          • Edward Biddle III (1851–1933), married Emilie Taylor Drexel (1851–1883) daughter of Anthony Joseph Drexel
            • Anthony Joseph Drexel Biddle, Sr. (1874–1948), subject of novel (written by his daughter), which was adapted as the Broadway play and Disney motion picture The Happiest Millionaire
            • Livingston Ludlow Biddle (1877–1959), married Rosalie Eugenia Carter Law (1890-1980)
            • Edward Craig Biddle (1879–1947), tennis player, married firstly Laura Baker Whelen (1879–1925)[15]
              • Craig Biddle Jr. (1902–1988)
              • George Drexel Biddle (1903–1952)
              • Laura May Biddle Stewart
        • Charles John Biddle (1819–1873), Civil War colonel and U.S. Congressman,[16] married Emma Mather (1830–1918)
          • Charles Biddle (1857–1923) married Letitia Glenn
            • Charles John Biddle (1890–1972), World War I aviator and lawyer
          • Alexander Mercer Biddle (1865–?), married Marriet Fox (1867–?)
            • Sydney Biddle (1901–?), married Donald Byers Barrows (1898–1991)
              • Donald Byers Barrows Jr. (1926–2019), married Jeannette Ballantine (1930–2011)
                • Sydney Biddle Barrows (born January 14, 1952), New York City madam and author, known as the "Mayflower Madam"
      • Thomas Biddle (1790–1831), War of 1812 hero who died after a duel with a Missouri Congressman over a perceived insult to his brother Nicholas
      • John Biddle (1792–1859), Michigan politician, married Eliza Falconer Bradish
        • Magaretta Falconer Biddle (1825–1913), married General Andrew Porter (1820–1872)
        • William Shepard Biddle (1830–1901), married Susan Dayton Ogden
          • John Biddle (1859–1936), Superintendent of the United States Military Academy
          • William Shepard Biddle II (1863–1938), married Margaret Alden Burrell
            • William Shepard Biddle III (1900–1981), Major General in World War II
      • Richard Biddle (1796–1847), U.S. Representative[17]
    • Nicholas Biddle (1750–1778), Revolutionary War Navy captain

Branch of John Biddle (1707–1789) and Sarah Owen (1711–1773)

  • John Biddle (1707–1789) and Sarah Owen (1711–1773)
    • Owen Biddle, Sr. (1737–1799), American Revolutionary War soldier, mathematician, astronomer, observed 1769 transit of Venus at Cape Henlopen, member of the American Philosophical Society, married Sarah Parke
      • John Biddle (1763–1815)
        • William Biddle (1806–1887), married Elizabeth Garrett (1806–1881)
      • Owen Biddle Jr. (1774–1806), member of the Carpenters' Company of the City and County of Philadelphia, architect-builder, author "The Young Carpenters' Apprentice" (1805)
      • Clement Biddle (1778–1856), married Mary Canby (1780–1849)[18]
        • Robert M. Biddle (1814–1902), married Anna Miller (1823–1891)
          • Henry Canby Biddle (1845–1886), married Anna Mary McIlvain (1850–1926)[19]
    • Clement Biddle (1740–1814), American Revolutionary War soldier, helped organize the “Quaker Blues" volunteers, deputy quartermaster general of the Pennsylvania and New Jersey militia, married Rebekah Cornell (born 1755) daughter of Gideon Cornell
      • Francis Biddle (1775–1775)
      • Thomas Alexander Biddle, Sr. (1776–1857), married Christine Williams (1780–1861)
        • Clement Biddle (1810–1879), prominent Philadelphia lawyer, served during the Civil War in Landis' Battery, Pennsylvania Militia Light Artillery.
        • Thomas Alexander Biddle Jr. (1814–1888), married Julia Cox (1819–1906). He was the senior partner of the firm of Thomas A. Biddle & Co., bankers and brokers, and a director of the Cumberland Valley Railroad Company, the Allentown Iron Company, the Equitable Life Insurance Company, and other corporations.
        • Henry Jonathan Biddle (1817–1862), married distant cousin Mary Deborah Baird (1829–1900), who endowed Biddle University. He served as a captain in the Union Army during the Civil War; he was mortally wounded during the battle of New Market Cross Roads
          • Jonathan Williams Biddle (1855–1877), served during the War with the Plains Indians. He was killed at Bear Paw Mountain, Montana when his regiment charged a camp of Nez Perce Indians.
          • Henry Jonathan Biddle (1862–1928), Oregon/Washington engineer, businessman, and philanthropist. In 1915 he bought the Columbia Gorge landmark Beacon Rock and developed a trail to its peak; his children Spencer and Rebecca donated it to Washington as a state park.
        • Alexander Williams Biddle Sr. (1819–1899), lieutenant colonel in the Union Army during the American Civil War, married Julia Williams Rush (1833–1898) granddaughter of Benjamin Rush
          • Alexander Williams Biddle Jr. (1856–1916), married Anne McKennan (1858–1934)
            • Julia Rush Biddle (1886–1978), married Thomas Charlton Henry (1887–1930), mother-in-law of Philip D. Armour Jr.
            • Alexander Biddle (1893–1973), married Margot Scull (1896–1972)
          • Henry Rush Biddle (1858–1877)
          • Julia Rush Biddle (1859–1885)
          • James Wilmer Biddle (1861–1927), married Cora Rowland (1861–1927)
          • Mariamne Biddle (1866–1917)
          • Lynford Biddle (1871–1941)
        • Jonathan Williams Biddle (1821–1856), married Emily Skinner Meigs (1824–1905)
          • Christine Biddle (1847–1900), married Richard McCall Cadwalader (1839–1918)
          • Charles Meigs Biddle (1849–1853)
          • Williams Biddle (1850–1852)
          • Mary Biddle (1851–1851)
          • Thomas Biddle (1853–1915)[20]
          • Emily Williams Biddle (1855–1931)
      • George Washington Biddle (1779–1812)
      • Mary Biddle (1781–1850) married Thomas Cadwalader (1779–1841) son of General John Cadwalader
      • Rebekah Cornell Biddle (1782–1870), married Nathaniel Chapman (1780–1853)
      • Clement Cornell Biddle (1784–1855), married Mary Searle Barclay (1785–1872)
        • John Barclay Biddle (1815–1879), married Caroline Phillips (1821–1906)
        • George Washington Biddle (1818–1897), married Maria Coxe McMurtrie (1818–1901)[21]
          • George Washington Biddle Jr. (1843–1886), married Mary Hosack Rogers
          • Algernon Sydney Biddle (1847–1891) married Frances Robinson
            • Moncure Biddle (1882–1956), a banker
            • George Biddle (1885–1973), an artist
            • Francis Beverly Biddle (1886–1968), US Attorney General, and primary American judge during the Nuremberg trials
            • Sydney Geoffrey Biddle (1889–1954), a psychologist
              • Oliver Cadwell Biddle, married to Katharine Mortimer (1923–2003)[22]
                • Christine Mortimer Biddle, married to Thomas George Reeves in 1972.[23][24]
          • Arthur Biddle (1852–1897)
        • Chapman Biddle (1822–1880), Civil War colonel
      • Anne Biddle (1785–1786)
      • Lydia H. Biddle (1787–1826)
      • Sarah T. Biddle (1789–1790)
      • Anne Wilkinson Biddle (1791–?), married Thomas Dunlap (1793–1864)[25]
      • John Gideon Biddle (1793–1826), married his cousin Mary Biddle (?–1854)
      • James Cornell Biddle (1795–1838), married Sarah Caldwell Keppele (1789–1877) daughter of Michael Keppele (1771–1821)
        • Thomas Biddle (diplomat) (1827–1875), married Sarah Frederica White (1845–1870)
        • Caldwell Keppele Biddle (1829–1862)
        • Catherine Keppele Biddle (1831–1914), married William P. Tatham (1820–1899)
        • Rebecca Biddle (1833–1859)
        • James Cornell Biddle (1835–1898), married Gertrude Gouverneur Meredith (1839–1905). He served as an officer in the Union Army during the Civil War.
        • Cadwalader Biddle (1837–1906), founder of Union League of Philadelphia[26]
    • Ann Biddle (1742–1807), married James Wilkinson (1757–1825)
      • John Wilkinson (1780–1796)
      • James Biddle Wilkinson (c. 1783–1813)
      • Joseph Biddle Wilkinson (1789–1865), married to Catherine Andrews (1785–1861)
      • Walter Wilkinson (1791–1837), married to Emilia Louise Valle (1793–1849)
gollark: Technically, you can generate equations for any finite set of data points.
gollark: I had a Minecraft orbital laser network, but targeting was a bit of a mess and that server is dead now.
gollark: Now, how should <@!509849474647064576> orbital laser capability work?
gollark: We need an accurate version where it makes 10000.
gollark: Actually, using logarithm™ technology we can determine that to half a population you need to decimate it 6.57881... times.

See also

References

  • The Washington Post; August 17, 1933 "Helen Avis Howard Engaged To Anthony J. Drexel, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Clinton Howard, of Atlanta, have announced the engagement of their daughter. Miss Helen Avis Howard, to Mr. Anthony Joseph Drexel 3d, son of Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Joseph Drexel, jr., of Philadelphia."
  • The New York Times; October 14, 2004 "Nicholas Duke Biddle, 83, Scion Of Wealth Who Helped the Poor. Nicholas Duke Biddle, scion of two prominent American families who helped refugees from Cuba and Caribbean, dies at age 83. Mr. Biddle was originally named Anthony Joseph Drexel Biddle III, after his father, Anthony Joseph Drexel Biddle Jr., a prominent diplomat."

Citations

  1. Jordan, John W. (2004). Colonial and Revolutionary Families of Pennsylvania. Genealogical Publishing Com. pp. 161–189. ISBN 9780806352398. Retrieved 27 November 2017.
  2. "Edward W. Biddle (1852-1931)". Dickinson College Archives & Special Collections. Dickinson College. 2005.
  3. Volunteer, PAGenWeb. "Obituaries, Death Notices, and Funeral Notices – Bi-Bl". montgomery.pa-roots.com. Retrieved 2016-04-09.
  4. "Records relating to Eric H. Biddle's missions to Great Britain". US National Archives. Office of Management and Budget. Retrieved March 28, 2011.
  5. Eric H. Biddle (March 1935). "What Price Insecurity". Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science. 178: 48–52. JSTOR 1019769.
  6. http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0011/001176/117626e.pdf
  7. "Oral History Interview with Ambassador John J. Muccio". Interview transcript. Harry S. Truman Library and Museum. Retrieved March 28, 2011.
  8. Thomas C. Blaisdell Jr. (1991). India and China in the World War I era, New Deal and Marshall Plan, and University of California, Berkeley. University of California, Berkeley. pp. 169, 171. Interviewed 1987–1988 by Harriet Nathan
  9. Bernstein, Adam (October 31, 2012). "Eric H. Biddle Jr., former CIA employee, dies". The Washington Post. Retrieved September 7, 2019.
  10. "BIDDLE, Edward – Biographical Information". bioguide.congress.gov. Retrieved 2016-04-09.
  11. Kestenbaum, Lawrence. "The Political Graveyard: Index to Politicians: Duke". politicalgraveyard.com. Retrieved 2016-04-09.
  12. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2010-12-24. Retrieved 2012-10-17.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  13. "Biddle". Pittsburgh Live. Retrieved 27 November 2017.
  14. http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/pittsburghtrib/news/pittsburgh/s_623092.html%5B%5D
  15. "Craig Biddle, Socialite and Tennis Star, Dies". The Philadelphia Inquirer. December 23, 1947. p. 14. Retrieved August 23, 2017.
  16. "BIDDLE, Charles John – Biographical Information". bioguide.congress.gov. Retrieved 2016-04-09.
  17. "BIDDLE, Richard – Biographical Information". bioguide.congress.gov. Retrieved 2016-04-09.
  18. "Samuel Gregg/Elizabeth Alford". www.pennock.ws.
  19. "Robert Sellers/Katherine Litchfield". www.pennock.ws.
  20. Transactions of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia. College. 1916. p. 11. Retrieved 27 November 2017.
  21. "Maria Coxe McMurtrie Biddle (1818-1901) - Find A..." www.findagrave.com.
  22. "Deaths BLAINE, KATHARINE MORTIMER". The New York Times. April 17, 2003. Retrieved 15 March 2016.
  23. Times, Special To The New York (25 June 1972). "Miss Biddle Betrothed To Thomas G. Reeves". The New York Times. Retrieved 21 August 2017.
  24. Times, Special To The New York (13 August 1972). "Christine Biddle Is Wed To Thomas G. Reeves". The New York Times. Retrieved 21 August 2017.
  25. Philadelphia, St Andrew's Society of (1907). Historical Catalogue ... with Biographical sketches of deceased members, 1749-1907. Printed for the society. p. 163. Retrieved 27 November 2017.
  26. "DEATH LIST OF A DAY.; Cadwalader Biddle" (PDF). query.nytimes.com. Retrieved 2016-04-09.
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