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  1. Oct 21, 2008 · Students can learn about the Choate family by investigating a room from their house, a deed from 1772, and artifacts that a family like the Choate's would have owned. In the mid-1760s, Abraham Choate had a 10-room house built in Ipswich, Massachusetts, for his wife, Sarah, and their growing family.

  2. Even though two of Carrie Choate’s brothers were Tennessee rebels, the Choates sheltered fugitive blacks in their house—risking its destruction by the mob for doing so—until Lincoln dispatched troops to restore order. Choate’s lasting distrust of the New York Irish as a political force probably stems from this bloody episode.

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    • Old New England Name
    • Energetic Fundraiser and Board Member
    • Made Irish Enemies
    • Served Six Years as Ambassador
    • Active in International Peace Efforts
    • Books

    Choate was the scion of one of Massachusetts's Puritan-era families. An ancestor, John Choate, sailed there from England in 1643, and a number of his descendants had distinguished themselves by the time of Joseph Hodges Choate's birth in 1832. There were farmers of Hog Island, sometimes called Choate Island, in Ipswich Bay of Massachusetts; another...

    Choate married Caroline Dutcher Sterling of Cleveland, Ohio, in 1861. In his after-work hours, he played a key role in the foundation of some of New York City's finest institutions. He was a member of the founding board of the American Museum of Natural History and a trustee of it until his death. For the Metropolitan Museum of Art, he served as an...

    Not surprisingly, Choate was known for a biting wit that sometimes bordered on sarcasm. He earned a fair amount of enmity among Americans of Irish descent for a speech he delivered in 1893 before the St. Patrick's Society of New York. There were many Irish-American politicians in the audience, and the question of Home Rulefor Ireland, free of Engli...

    In 1899 Choate was appointed Ambassador to the Court of St. James, one of the most coveted of all diplomatic postings, by President McKinley. The appointment aroused an outcry from some Irish-Americans, and one journal termed it "a cruel insult" on the part of McKinley. Choate met both Queen Victoria and her successor, Edward VII. His six years in ...

    Choate's time in London was a pleasant and prestigious one, but he was sometimes known to ruffle the more formal English aristocracy. Once, as guest at a manor home, he was reportedly mistaken for a butler by an English aristocrat, who gave the ambassador the command, "Call me a cab," according to Strong's 1917 biography. Choate allegedly replied, ...

    Dictionary of American BiographyBase Set, American Council of Learned Societies, 1928-1936. Strong, Theron G., Joseph H. Choate: New Englander, New Yorker, Lawyer, Ambassador,Dodd, Mead and Company, 1917. □

  4. William, son of Francis (1730-85), was a sea captain. His son George married Susanna, daughter of Judge Stephen Choate. Their son George, a physician (1796-1880), married Margaret Manning, daughter of Gamaliel Hodges, of Salem.

  5. Aug 6, 2008 · Children of WILLIAM CHOATE and PRUDENCE CHOATE are: i. JAMES MONROE8 CHOATE, b. 28 April 1822, Tennessee; d. 09 August 1899, Karnes County, Texas; m.

  6. The names of their children are Mary, Ellen, Richard, William, Charley, Henry and Samuel. David Choates father was Silas Choate whose first wife was Isabell Brown. Their children were Delilah, Sanders, John and James.

  7. Oct 7, 2020 · Is this your ancestor? Compare DNA and explore genealogy for Ephraim Choate born 1742 Gloucester, Essex, Massachusetts died 1784 West Gloucester, , Essex, Massachusetts including ancestors + descendants + mitochondrial DNA + more in the free family tree community.

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