Samuel H. P. Hall
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Samuel Holden Parsons Hall (June 28, 1804 Middletown, Middlesex County, Connecticut – March 5, 1877 Binghamton,
Broome County, New York Broome County is a county in the U.S. state of New York. As of the 2020 United States census, the county had a population of 198,683. Its county seat is Binghamton. The county was named for John Broome, the state's lieutenant governor when Br ...
) was an American merchant and politician from New York.


Life

He was the son of Dr.
William Brenton Hall William Brenton Hall (May 31, 1764 – June 29, 1809) was an 18th-century physician in Connecticut, United States. Biography Born in Wallingford, Connecticut, William Brenton Hall was the eldest son of Brenton Hall, a prosperous farmer, and Lamen ...
(1764–1809), a physician, and Mehetable (Parsons) Hall (1772–1825), a daughter of Gen. Samuel Holden Parsons (1737–1789). Rev.
Jonathan Parsons Jonathan Parsons (November 30, 1705 – July 19, 1776) was a Christian New England clergyman during the late colonial period and a supporter of the American Revolution. Born in West Springfield, Massachusetts, he was the youngest son of Ebenezer ( ...
(1705–1776) was his great-grandfather. On May 14, 1826, he married Emeline Bulkeley (1798–1855), daughter of Captain Charles and Eunice (Robbins) Bulkeley of Rocky Hill, Connecticut. They had five children: Charles Samuel (1827–1910), William Brenton (1829–1856), Josephine Emeline (1830–1857), Theodore Parsons (1835–1910), and Richard Henry (1839–1872). Declining the opportunity to attend his father's alma mater (Yale), Hall operated business firms in Middletown and Rocky Hill in partnership with his brother, William Brenton Hall (1798–1824). In 1833, he and his family moved to Buffalo—but the climate proving insalubrious, in 1837, he moved to Binghamton, a growing town at the junction of the Chenango and Susquehanna rivers (and a way station on the Chenango Canal, a branch of the Erie). Hall served as trustee and president of the village of Binghamton. In 1846, he was elected as a Whig member of the
New York State Senate The New York State Senate is the upper house of the New York State Legislature; the New York State Assembly is its lower house. Its members are elected to two-year terms; there are no term limits. There are 63 seats in the Senate. Partisan com ...
from 1847 to 1849, sitting in the 70th (6th D.), 71st and
72nd New York State Legislature The 72nd New York State Legislature, consisting of the New York State Senate and the New York State Assembly, met from January 2 to April 11, 1849, during the first year of Hamilton Fish's governorship, in Albany. Background Under the provis ...
s (both 23rd D.). With the election of Millard Fillmore to the U.S. presidency, Hall's cousin, Nathan Kelsey Hall was named U.S. Postmaster General. Through this connection, he became a member of the board of directors of the Erie Railroad. Following the death of his first wife, Hall he married her cousin, Elnora Robbins (b. 1812) in 1857. Samuel Holden Parsons Hall died in Binghamton on March 5, 1877, and was buried in Spring Forest Cemetery in that city. Hall's eldest son, Charles Samuel, received a B.A. from Yale College in 1848 and an M.A. and L.L.B. from the Yale Law School in 1850. He became a prominent attorney in Binghamton and a nationally-known genealogist. His brother, Theodore Parsons Hall, graduated from Yale in 1856 and became a leading business man in Detroit, where he married into one of the old French-Canadian families. He too became a well-known genealogist and author of books on local history.


Sources

Theodore Parsons Hall. ''Genealogical Notes Relating to the Families of Hon. Lyman Hall of Georgia, Hon. Samuel Holden Parsons of Binghamton, N.Y.,and Hon. Nathan Kelsey Hall of Buffalo, N.Y.'' (Albany: Joel Munsell's Sons, 1886). Charles Samuel Hall. ''Hall Ancestry: A Series of Sketches of the Lineal Ancestors of the Children of Samuel Holden Parsons Hall and His Wife Emeline Bulkeley of Binghamton, N.Y. with Some Account of Nearly One Hundred of the Early Puritan Families of New England'' (New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons, 1896). "Charles Samuel Hall." ''Obituary Record of Graduates of Yale University Deceased during the Academical Year Ending June 1910'' (New Haven: Yale University, 1910), 1166-1168. "Theodore Parsons Hall." ''Obituary Record of Graduates of Yale University Deceased during the Academical Year Ending June 1909'' (New Haven: Yale University, 1909).
''The New York Civil List''
compiled by Franklin Benjamin Hough (pages 136 and 141; Weed, Parsons and Co., 1858)
''The American Biographical Sketch Book''
by William Hunt (1849; pg. 151–154)

at Family Tree Maker


External links

* {{DEFAULTSORT:Hall, Samuel H P 1804 births 1877 deaths New York (state) state senators New York (state) Whigs 19th-century American legislators Politicians from Binghamton, New York Politicians from Middletown, Connecticut 19th-century New York (state) politicians