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View Tree for John NapierJohn Napier (b. September 15, 1816, d. 1903)

John Napier (son of James A. Napier and Rachel Michael) was born September 15, 1816 in Halifax, Nova Scotia, and died 1903. He married Emeline T. Beebe on April 13, 1845 in Waterford, Conn, daughter of Lyman Beebe.

 Includes NotesNotes for John Napier:
From the History of Cattaraugus County, New York Pgs. 365-66.



John Napier was born in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Sept. 15 1816. His ancestry are numbered among the Napiers who have figured quite conspicuously in the history of Great Britain for several centuries past. His father was James Napier, who was
born in the town of Huntly, Aberdeenshire, Scotland, and his mother Rachael (Michael) Napier, who was born in the adjoining parish of Gartly. They emigrated to Halifax, Nova Scotia, in the year 1816, and after remaining there twelve years
returned, with their family, to Scotland. In 1834, John and an elder brother, William, again crossed the ocean, and landing in Halifax, removed to Windsor, where they remained for about one year. They then went to New York, and soon
afterwards to Quincy, Mass., where John was apprenticed to the stone-cutter's trade, at which her served three years and at the expiration of that time was a first-class journeyman. He removed to Virginia and worked at his trade on the James
River Canal, and from there embarked for Scotland with his brother John in the fall of 1838. In the following spring they returned to America, accompanied by their parents whom they brought out an subsequently cared for. They resumed work at
their trade on the Erie Canal, and in 1840 arrived at Hinsdale. While there he (John) visited Machias, and took the contract to erect the stone house for Samuel Butler, in which he now resides. In 1844 he went to Buffalo, and working there a
brief period he moved to New London, Conn., and worked at Mill Stone Point, six miles from New London. After three months' service he was promoted foreman over the stone-cutters, having sixty journeymen under him, and from that time to the
present has always been engaged either as superintendent on public works, or contracting for the same.

On the 13th of April, 1845, he married Miss Emeline T. Beebe, who was born at Waterford, New London Co., Conn., Dec. 16, 1827. They have had six children born to them, - one son and five daughters, - of whom two daughters and one son survive.
Margaret, born Feb. 1, 1846 married George L. Napier, April 13, 1875; Mary Isabella, born Sept. 19, 1848, Griselda, born May 27, 1851, died Jan. 18, 1863; Lovina born De. 22, 1856, died in infancy; Sarah Jane, born April 27, 1860, died July
28, 1863; James Allen, born March 23, 1862, resides with his parents.

In the winter of 1846 he left Connecticut and went to Lawrence, Mass., and was employed as foreman over stonecutters in the construction of a dam across the Merrimac, and in the erection of manufacturing building. In the summer of 1848 was
engaged on the Portage Aqueduct across the Genesee River, at Portageville. From that time until 1857 he was a contractor in connection with his brothers, William, James, and George, on the Genesee Valley and Erie Canal, in the construction of
masonry. In 1857 and 1858 himself and brothers mentioned above, and their brother-in-law, Charles Brodie, were engaged in the building of the stone-work on the bridge spanning the Mississippi River at St. Paul. In 1860 he became
superintendent of construction of the new enlarged lock on the Louisville and Portland Canal, at Louisville, Ky., and was thus engaged until 1864. The succeeding two years he was employed in the superintendency of masonry on the Louisville and
Nashville Railroad. A part of the year 1866 he was occupied with his brothers in the erection of the Ten Broeck Free Academy at Franklinville. In 1867 he obtained the contract to get the stone from the Nauvoo, Ill., quarries, the same as used
in the building of the Mormon Temple, and for building the post-office and customhouse at Springfield, Ill. In 1868 they erected the county poor-house in the town of Machias. In July of the same year he went to Springfield, Ill, and became
superintendent over the construction of the stone-work of the State Capitol, and thus continued until December, 1876. in 1869 he was engaged as superintendent of the Grafton Stone Quarries on the Mississippi, forty miles above St. Louis, for
the building of the St. Louis Bridge and Water-Works. While there he had from two hundred and fifty to three hundred men under his supervision. In the mean time he and his brothers built the masonry, trestleing, and piling on the Buffalo, New
York and Philadelphia Railroad from Machias to Emporium, a distance of about sixty miles. In the summer and fall of 1878 they built the Springville and Sardinia Railroad (narrow-gauge). In addition to the above, Mr. Napier and his brothers,
and Charles and Robert Brodie, were engaged in bridging the Wabash and other streams on the New Albany and Salem and Toledo, Wabash, and Western Railroads.

Mr. Napier has been a man of indomitable energy and untiring industry. For more than forty years he has been actively engaged in superintending the construction of public works and various other enterprises, many of which, among others the
Harlem High Bridge and the State Capitol at Springfield, Ill., remain as monuments to his mechanical skill. He is a Republican in politics, but never at time to accept political preferment. His various contracts have been honestly managed,
and completed according to the terms of his agreements. He is generally considered a man irreproachable personal integrity, a kind husband, father, and friend, and a good citizen in every sense of that term.


More About John Napier:
Fact 4: Maple Grove Cemetary, Machias, New York.

More About John Napier and Emeline T. Beebe:
Marriage: April 13, 1845, Waterford, Conn.

Children of John Napier and Emeline T. Beebe are:
  1. James Allen Napier.
  2. Margaret Napier, b. February 01, 1846.
  3. Mary Isabella Napier, b. September 19, 1848.
  4. Griselda Napier, b. May 27, 1851, d. January 18, 1863.
  5. Lovinia Napier, b. December 22, 1856, d. March 21, 1857.
  6. Sarah Jane Napier, b. April 27, 1860, d. July 28, 1863.
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