138 HART FAMILY.
THEIR CHILDREN, BEING THE NINTH GENERATION.

583. Frederick Augustus, born July 25th, 1849, at Cornwall, Conn.
584. Arthur Burton, born June 26th, 1855, at Cornwall, Conn.
585. Mary Elizabeth, born February 8th, 1859, at Cornwall, Conn.
586. Emma Lucretia, born March 15th, 1865, at Goshen, Conn.

334.                     West Cornwall, Conn.

JULIUS LEAVITT HART, Cornwall, Conn., third son of Julius Hart, of the same town, and his wife, Rhoda (Rogers), born August 29th, 1826, at Cornwall; married, at Malone, Franklin County, N. Y., August 1st, 1863, Mrs. Hattie C. Watson, alias Hattie C. Smith, daughter of - Smith, and his wife, Betsey (Chamberlain), of Vergennes, Vt. She was born September 6th, 1844, at Kent, Conn. In 1872 he was residing at Englewood, Bergen County, N. J., and was proprietor of the Palisade House there.

THEIR CHILDREN, BEING THE NINTH GENERATION.

587. Minnie Luella, born November 28th, 1864, at Goshen.
588. George Edward, born May 11th, l867, at Goshen,
        Grace Elizabeth, born January 9th, 1872, at Ridgewood, N. Y.; died September 7th, 1872, at Englewood, N. J.

336.                    West Cornwall, Conn.

ELIAS BURTON HART, West Cornwall, Conn., fourth son of Julius Hart, of the same locality, and his wife, Rhoda (Rogers), born February 21st, 1834, at Cornwall; married October 7th, 1857, Hattie A., daughter of Lee Canfield, of Salisbury, Conn. He was principal of a boarding school for boys at West Cornwall, from 1856 to 1863, at his residence. The institution was very successful. It had an attendance of twenty boarding pupils, mostly from New York City. This school was first organized in 1853, by Noah Rogers Hart, an elder brother, who never enjoyed a college education, but by personal effort and kindness of Horace Webster, LL. D., a patron of the school, and principal of the New York Free Academy, he received the honorable degree of Bachelor and Master of Arts from the University of Vermont. In 1862 he formed a partnership with his youngest brother, and established business in New York City under the firm of George S. Hart & Co., commission merchants, and wholesale dealers in butter, cheese, and lard, at 39 Pearl Street. He was thus successfully engaged for several years, when owing to infirm health, he retired from business to the quiet of his farm in West Cornwall. The business is still carried on under the firm of George S. Hart & Howell, at 35 Pearl Street, and in 1874 is one of the largest and most successful of any similar one on this continent.