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HOYT FAMILY |
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HOYT FAMILY IS PROMINENT IN WAYLAND HISTORY
Bessie B. Baker was the last representative
of the Hoyt family left in Wayland.
The original [Isaac] Hoyt family of New York
State consisted of eleven children, five of whom located in Wayland in the 1850's
and early 1860's. Later they were joined by a sister, Anna Smith and family.
William and Edwin Hoyt established a foundry on the site now occupied by the
F.D. Hilbert's home.
[Isaac] Newton Hoyt began a shingle business
in Wayland before the war, then enlisted. [Isaac] Newton Hoyt started in the
shingle business with his brother-in-law, Marvin Burnett in Dorr, after coming
home from the Civil War.
They carried on the business for three years,
then Newton came back to Wayland to engage in the lumber business until 1893
when he retired. Bessie Baker was his granddaughter. At the age of 85 Charles
Edgar Hoyt of Oak Park, Ill., and son of William V. and Addie Hoyt, is the oldest
living member of the second generation of this large Hoyt family.
In the early days there were 35 members of
this family in our village 12 of the older generation and 23 grandchildren.
Etta Hoyt Van Valkenburg and her husband,
Theodore, had three children: Etta Dunwell, Frank Van and Imogene Rogers Quinlan;
Minot Hoyt had six children: Bert, Frank, Edith Hoyt Whitney, Luzern, Mable
Hoyt Schuyler and Alton; Ervin and Carrie Hoyt had four: Stella Mausly, Frank,
Fred and Mildred Hoyt Kavin: William V. and Addie Hoyt had three children: Jessie,
Charles Edgar and Mary Jane McLeod; Isaac Newton and Ellen Hoyt had three children:
Lillian Buskirk, Elmer T. who died in infancy and Fannie. The I.N. Hoyts lived
in one house for 36 years, now occupied by Harold Weaver.
Anna Hoyt Biggs Smith had four children: Nellie
Briggs Dunn, Roland, Katherine and Estelle Smith. Kate as we knew her was brought
up by William Hoyt while Estelle was adopted by William Oliver of Allegan.
The William Hoyt house is now owned and occupied
by the Ernest Martins; the Minot Hoyt home is owned by D. Taylor and J. Vollink;
the Edwin Hoyt home is across Cedar street north of Ernest Martins' and now
owned by St. Therese Church.
Transcribed from: Wayland Globe July 1953
Submitted by
Nancy
Morefield,
g-g-granddaughter of Minot & Augusta Keziah [Harrison] Hoyt, through Isabel
"Mable" Hoyt & Earl Lester Schuyler.
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