Descendants of
John
Roofe MacArthur, b. 18 Feb 1803, Canajoharie, NY; d. 17 Feb 1870, Rochester, NY;
m. 28 Dec 1822, Auburn, NY, Mary Miller,
b. 26 Mar 1804, NY; d. 30 Nov 1864. John Roofes parents, Archibald MacArthur (d.
1843) and Eleanor Cameron (d. 1842), emigrated from Inverness, Scotland in approximately
1800. The MacArthur clan had supported the
Stuarts and Bonny Prince Charlie and as a result lost much of their land to the Campbells. John Roofes wife, Mary Miller, was the
daughter of William Miller (d. 1839) and Mary Van Winkle (d. 1804) from Rockaway, NJ. John Roofe and his wife settled in the Genesee Valley
of New York at a location on Keshequa Creek approximately 7 miles south of Mt. Morris and
2 miles northeast of Tuscarora. There he
became a very successful entrepreneur. Aside
from farming, he built two saw mills and engaged in lumbering. The Genesee Valley Canal was subsequently
constructed across his property. He obtained
several large contracts for the construction of this canal as well as later contracts for
the enlargement of the Erie Canal. Later in
his life he acquired substantial timber holdings near Cheboygan, MI.
1. William M. MacArthur, b. 13 Apr 1825,
Steuben Co., NY; d. 1 Jun 1894, Cheboygan, MI; m. Alice
Horn, b. ca. 1834, NY. William together with his brothers Archibald and James
formed a business to engage in lumbering and contracting.
In 1873, William moved to Cheboygan, MI to focus on the extensive
timberlands owned by the business in that area. He
became a prominent citizen in Cheboygan and was a member of the Michigan legislature. After William died, Alice moved to Grand Rapids and
adopted a young girl.
1.1 Lillian
2. Alexander MacArthur, b. 4 Apr 1827, NY; d. 19
Jul 1902, NY; m. Mary Wycoff, b. ca.
1832, NY. Unlike his other brothers, Alexander remained a farmer
and had a farm near Conesus, NY.
2.1 William
MacArthur, b. ca. 1865, NY
2.2 John
A. MacArthur, b. ca. 1866, NY; m. Carrie. Lived on a
240 acre farm near Conesus, NY.
3. Sarah Catherine (Kate) MacArthur,
b. 23 Sep 1829, NY; d. 7 Feb 1899, Chicago, IL; m. Xavier
George (George) Schultz, b. 10 Feb 1828, Schlestadt, Alsace, France;
d. 1874, Newark, NY. The couple lived in Rochester, NY and then in 1858
moved to a farm near the John R. MacArthur home. When
George Xavier died at an early age, Sarah Catherine was left a widow with small children. The family first lived in Batavia, NY and then
moved to Chicago in 1882.
3.1 William (Will)
Ward Schultz, b. 15 Aug 1851, NY; m. 1st
1 Nov 1876, Cheboygan, MI, Elizabeth E.
Leavitt (mother of 3.1.1), b. NH; m. 2nd Helen Clare Gibbon (mother of 3.1.2
4). Will
preceded the family to Chicago. After the
entire family arrived, all of the Schultz brothers formed a partnership and engaged in the
retail lumber business in Chicago.
3.1.1 Jerome
Archibald Schultz, b. ca. 1878, IL; m. 1st 2 Nov 1906, Chicago, IL, Nan M. Taylor; m. 2nd 14 Jan
1917, Schuyler, IL, Edna Bernice Dace
3.1.2 Helen
Clare Schultz, b. 13 Mar 1917; d. 18
Dec 2005, Kansas City, MO. Helen lived in Kansas City, MO most of her life.
3.1.3 William
Ward Schultz Jr., b. 24 Jul 1921; d. 20 Jun 1944, Germany. During WW II,
Bill was a bombardier assigned to the 492nd Bomb Group. He was killed in action in a bombing raid over Politz,
Germany.
3.1.4 Robert
Gibbon Schultz, b. 24 Jul 1921; d. 15 Sep 1989, Oak Park, IL; m. Vernette Smith. Robert was
the twin brother of William Ward. He was also a bombardier in the same bomb group as his
brother. He was awarded the Distinguished
Flying Cross. After the War, he pursued a
career in journalism and became city editor of the Chicago Daily News.
3.2 Archibald
Arthur Schultz, b. 10 Dec 1853, NY; d. 21 Dec 1886.
Arch joined his older brother Will in
the retail lumber business in Chicago. He died
of mountain fever at the age of 33.
3.3 James
Milton Schultz, b. 15 Feb 1858, Rochester, NY; d. 26 Nov 1930, Oak Park, IL; m. 27
June 1899, Cleveland, OH, Margaret Elizabeth
Gilliland, b. 3 Jan 1873, North Fairfield, OH; d. 1 May 1946, Pomona, CA. In order to
help support his widowed mother and the small children, James, with the assistance of one
of his MacArthur uncles, obtained a job in the timber industry in the South. There he contracted malaria, almost died from
complications, and required several years of convalescence.
He moved with the family to Chicago where he formed a partnership with his
brothers. James, Alex, Georgia, and Eddith
lived with their mother until she died in 1899. After
she died, James married at the age of 41. James
and his family lived in Oak Park, IL.
3.3.1 Catherine
(Kay) Elizabeth Schultz, b. 5 Jul 1900, Chicago, IL; d. 7 Jan 1987,
Santa Barbara, CA; m. 25 Mar 1925, Seattle, WA, Earl
Canute Anderson, b. 13 Dec 1896, Grantsburg, WI; d. 5 Sep 1960, Grantsburg, WI. Earl Anderson
was engaged in foreign trade, particularly in the Orient.
Immediately prior to Pearl Harbor, the family lived in Manila for seven
years. Beginning in the 1950s, Catherine
taught fourth grade in Menlo Park, CA and then retired in Santa Barbara, CA.
3.3.2 Margaret (Peg)
Isabel Schultz, b. 2 Jul 1904, Oak Park,
IL; d. 18 Nov 1986, New Castle, IN; m. 27 Jun 1929, Oak Park, IL, George Thomas Rea, b. 25 May 1905,
Urbana-Champaign, IL; d. 14 Feb 1988, New Castle, IN.
The Rea family lived in New Castle, IN. George Rea became the treasurer of Perfect Circle
Piston Rings.
3.3.3 Dorothy
(Dottie) Xaviere Schultz, b. 25 Mar 1912, Oak Park, IL; d. 21 Jul
1992, Richmond, IN; m. June 27, 1933, Riverside, IL, LeRoy Ware, b. 4 Sep 1908, Hagerman, NM; d.
14 Sep 1997, Richmond, IN. The couple spent most of their married life in
Richmond, IN. LeRoy Ware was the nephew of
Herbert Everett Reagan (5.7, infra).
3.4 Alexander
(Alex) Joseph Schultz, b. Jul 1862, Mt. Morris, NY; not married. The
youngest brother remained a bachelor and was a partner with Will and James.
3.5 Georgia
(George) Xaviere Schultz, b. 18 Sep 1863, Mt. Morris, NY; d. 3 Aug
1955, Saratoga, CA; m. 6 Feb 1907, Chicago, IL, Dr.
Thomas Stephen Green, b. 8 Jul 1868, Jacksonville, IL; d. 3 Feb 1949, Chicago, IL;
no children. Georgia
also delayed marriage to assist her mother. She
married at the age of 43. She and her husband
lived on the South Side of Chicago where Thomas Green practiced medicine.
3.6 Catherine
(Kate) Cameron Schultz, b. 1 Aug 1866, Mt. Morris, NY; d. 1957, Los
Angeles, CA; m. Rev. Arthur Henry Armstrong,
b. 27 Nov. 1866; d. 6 June 1938. Arthur Armstrong, a 1889 graduate of Beloit College,
was a Congregational minister in St. Louis and Chicago and became the superintendent of
the Missouri Congregational Conference. He
also led many tours to Europe.
3.6.1 Arthur
Alexander Armstong, b. 4 Nov 1906; d. 13 Aug 2001, Solvang, CA; m. Frances Gray.
Arthur Armstrong was a 1930 graduate
of Harvard Law School and practiced tax law in Los Angeles for many years.
3.7 Eddith
Isabel Schultz, b. 15 Aug 1872, NY; d. 3 Oct 1947, Cheboygan, MI; m. 1st
1904, William Stuart MacArthur, b. 15
Mar 1868; d. 13 Oct 1906, Cheboygan, MI; m. 2nd Miles Edward Riggs, b. 1871; no children. Eddith
Schultz spent her married life in Cheboygan, MI. Her
first husband, a distant MacArthur relative, died at age 38 from
diabetes. Her second husband was a druggist in
Cheboygan and for a period of time was mayor of Cheboygan.
4. James MacArthur, b. 5 Feb 1832; d. Mar
1893; m. 20 Sep 1853, Rebecca B. Bliss,
b. 21 Sep 1832. James moved to Chicago and was a principal in the
MacArthur Bros. firm. When he died, he had one
of the largest private libraries in Chicago.
4.1 Mary
R. MacArthur, b. 22 Nov 1855
5. Archibald MacArthur, b. 15 Jun 1834, Mt.
Morris, NY; d. 3 Oct 1907, Chicago, IL; m. 1856 Keturah
(Kittie) Ann Pratt, b. 26 Sep 1837, Oramel, NY; d. 22 Oct 1909. Archibald
moved to Chicago in 1873 and became the driving force in the growth of MacArthur Bros. Co. The engineering firm became one of the largest
railroad contracting firms in the west. The
firm had large contracts for the construction of buildings and preparation of grounds at
the Worlds Columbia Exposition and for other major projects. Archibald had a family home in Riverside, IL.
5.1 Georgie
MacArthur, b. 20 Feb 1857; d. 12 May 1859
5.2 Alice
Maud MacArthur, b. ca. 1858, NY; m. 1 Jan 1884, Cook Co., IL, Robert Sommerville, d. 12 Nov 1886
5.2.1 Dorothea
Sommerville, m. Henry Faurot
5.2.2 Marian
Sommerville
5.3 Arthur
Frederick (Fred) MacArthur, b. 24 Oct 1860, Oramel, NY; d. 1 Dec 1926,
Salt Lake City, UT; m. 24 June 1889, New York, NY, Mary
(Mamie) Seymour Barnum, b. New York, NY; no children. After
graduating from Harvard in 1882, Fred joined his fathers engineering firm of
MacArthur Bros. Co. He eventually assumed the
leadership of the company. Mamie was the
cousin of Pauline Arnoux (5.4).
5.4 John Roofe MacArthur II, b. 24 July
1862, Mt. Morris, NY; d. 1940, New York, NY; m. 1st 27 Jun 1889, New York, NY, Corfu Pauline Arnoux (mother of 5.4.1
3) b. Brownville, NY; m. 2nd
Angele (Muriel) Laure Fanget (mother
of 5.4.4 7), b. 1898, Paris, France; d. 1989. John graduated from Harvard in 1885 and entered the
Foreign Service. He spent much of his adult
life in Europe. He was knighted by the King of
Italy, who was extremely pleased with the work done by MacArthur Bros. Co. in constructing
the harbor of Palermo. His gravestone has the
inscription, Lawyer, Statesman, Civil Engineer.
5.4.1 Arnaud MacArthur, d. infancy
5.4.2 Arthur Paul MacArthur, b. 14 June
1901
5.4.3 William
MacArthur, b. 25 Mar. 1906; d. 4 Nov. 1980
5.4.4 John
Roofe MacArthur III, b. 1922, Lausanne, Switzerland; d. 1965, Pakistan; m. Alicia.
John was an engineer and was killed in
a mountaineering accident in the Hindu Kush in Pakistan.
5.4.5 Robert
Stuart MacArthur, b. 1925, Lausanne, Switzerland
5.4.6 Archibald Gordon MacArthur, b. 1926, Lausanne,
Switzerland; d. 7 Jul 2006, Fairfax, VA; m. Annerose. Gordon
graduated from Harvard in 1949 and subsequently did graduate work at Paris, Oxford, the
Hague, and John Hopkins. From 1962 to 1991, he
was in the Foreign Service with assignments in Africa, at the State Department, and at the
United Nations.
5.4.7 Mary-Muriel MacArthur, b. Lausanne, Switzerland;
not married
5.5 Jennibel
MacArthur, b. ca. 1867, NY; d. 12 Nov 1886 at age 19
5.6 Florence
(Flossie) Blanche MacArthur, b. 26 Nov 1871, Montclair, NJ; d. 25 Jan
1945, Salt Lake City, UT; m. 3 Feb 1903, William
Olin Story, b. 31 Oct 1874, Denver, CO; d. 9 Dec 1929, Salt Lake City, UT. Florence
married William Story, an attorney and the son of a lieutenant governor of Colorado
(1891-93). William Story first joined his
fathers law practice in Ouray, CO and then moved with his family in approximately
1913 to Salt Lake City, UT, where he practiced law with his father in the law firm of
Story & Steigmeyer.
5.6.1 William
MacArthur (Mac) Story, b. 14
Nov 1904, Ouray, CO; d. 16 Jan 1972, Salt Lake City, UT; m. 28 Nov 1939, Catherine Nutter, b. 2 Dec 1909; d. 27
Mar 1966, Salt Lake City, UT.
5.6.2 Marian
Belle (MB) Story, b. 16 Jun 1906, Ouray, CO; d. 30 Jun 1984, Salt Lake
City, UT; m. 31 Dec 1929, Francis Boydel Goeltz,
b. 6 Sep 1903, Erie, PA; d. Aug 1966, Palm Beach, FL.
5.6.3 Florence
Tudie MacArthur Story, b. 23 Jan 1909, Ouray, CO; d. 27 Sep 1964, Salt
Lake City, UT; m. Nov 1935, Lewis Marshall
Haines, b. 5 Sep 1904; d. 5 Jan 1956, Salt Lake City, UT.
5.6.4 Eleanor
Tiny Story, b. 10 Jan 1911, Ouray, CO; d. 17 Nov 1995, Boise, ID; m. 4
Jan 1934, Salt Lake City, Utah, Allison Leroy
Nowels, b. 6 Jan 1909, Omaha, NE; d. 17 Jun 1988, Salt Lake City, UT.
5.7 Marion
Ethel MacArthur, b. 1880, IL; d. 1917; m. Herbert
Everett Reagan, b. 19 Mar 1877; d. 6 Apr 1922
5.7.1 Archibald
MacArthur Reagan, b. 21 Sep 1904, Riverside, IL; d. 21 May 1965; m. 25 Nov 1934,
Chicago, IL, Agnes Erickson, b. 22 Jun
1907; d. 21 Jul 1988, LaGrange, IL
5.7.2 Keturah
MacArthur Reagan, b. 26 Sep 1906, Riverside, IL; d. 22 Oct 1995, Asheville, NC; m.
19 Oct 1929, Riverside, IL, George Silverthorne
Faurot, b. 3 May 1901, Riverside, IL; d. 17 Jan 1968, Asheville, NC
5.7.3 Ethel
(Babbie) MacArthur Reagan, b. 3 May 1909, Riverside, IL; d. 26 Sep
1997, Chelan, WA; m. 20 Jun 1931, Riverside, IL, George
Maclean Hellyer, b. 28 Feb 1912; dv. 1952; d. 12 Feb 1988, Seattle, WA
5.7.4 Barbara
Reagan, b. 5 Oct 1910, Riverside, IL; d. 15 Mar 1990; m. 18 June 1938, Brookline,
MA, Arthur Falkerson Toole, Jr., b. 1
Jul 1911, Birmingham, AL
5.7.5 Ruth
Reagan, b. 21 Dec 1911, Riverside, IL; d. 15 Mar 1972, Talladega, AL
5.7.6 Irene
Reagan, b/d inf. 1916, Riverside, IL
6. John M.
MacArthur, b. 29 Oct 1836, NY; m. Sarah,
b. ca. 1843, OH. As a teenager, John ran away from home for the
goldfields of California. He subsequently was
involved in mining operations in the Southwest and Mexico.
For a period of time, the family lived in Oakland, CA in the home built and furnished by the famous Gold
Rush actress Lotta Crabtree.
6.1 Archibald
MacArthur, b. ca. 1861, CA
6.2 Willliam
MacArthur, b. ca. 1863, CA
6.3 Arthur
MacArthur, b. ca. 1865, CA
6.4 Augustus
MacArthur, b. ca. 1868, CA
6.5 Gertrude
MacArthur, b. ca. 1871, CA
7. Mary Jane (Jennie) MacArthur,
b. 25 Dec 1838, NY; d. 5 Aug 1932; m. 1st John E. Rittenhouse, b. 31 Jul 1829, NY; d.
10 Mar 1910, Cheboygan, MI; m. 2nd 27 Feb 1895, Cheboygan, MI, Capt. Orange Ball, b. ca. 1834, VT. In 1868,John
Rittenhouse purchased the John R. MacArthur home and farm and engaged in wheat farming. The family suffered a great tragedy when four of
their seven children died of diphtheria in a short period of time. In approximately 1890, the couple sold the John R.
MacArthur farm and moved to a farm on Mullet Lake near Cheboygan, MI.
7.1 MacArthur
(Arthur) Rittenhouse, Arthur married, had a child, and moved to Michigan.
7.2 Nellie Rittenhouse, d. 31 Mar 1880, Cheboygan,
MI. Nellie
died of diphtheria at age 18 when visiting MacArthur relatives in Cheboygan.
7.3 Edward
A. Rittenhouse, b. ca. 1865, NY; d. 22 Dec 1882, Mt. Morris, NY. Died at age
17; one of three siblings to die of diphtheria within 3 weeks.
7.4 Mary
J. Rittenhouse, b. ca. 1867, NY; d. 1 Dec 1882, Mt. Morris, NY. Died of
diphtheria at age 15.
7.5 Jessie
Belle Rittenhouse, b. 8 Dec. 1869, Mt.
Morris, NY; d. 28 Sep. 1948, Detroit, MI; m. 1924, Clinton
Scollard, 18 Sep 1860, Clinton, CN; d. 19
Nov 1932, Kent, CN. Jessie Rittenhouses college education was a gift
from her Uncle Archibald MacArthur, who was impressed by her talent. She became a recognized poet and was perhaps most
noted for her anthologies of modern poetry. She
was the only woman involved in the founding of the Poetry Society of America and was its
secretary for ten years. She received an
honorary doctorate degree from Rollins College with which she was closely associated. Her published autobiography, My House of Life
(Houghton Miffin Co. 1934), has frequent references to her MacArthur relatives. Her husband, Clinton Scollard, was also a famous
poet who issued 35 different publications including 11 books of poetry.
7.6 Hattie
G. Rittenhouse, b. ca. 1873, NY; d. 7 Dec 1882, Mt. Morris, NY. Died of
diphtheria at age 10.
7.7 John
C. Rittenhouse, b. 1877, NY; m. 10 Nov 1902, Cheboygan, MI, Louise Brady, b. 1880. John became a
well-known maker of fine furniture.
7.7.1 Nellie
Rittenhouse, m. Harrigan
7.7.2 Louise
Rittenhouse Louise lived in Detroit.
8. Cornelia (Nell) Cox MacArthur,
b. 10 Mar 1841, NY; m. Jacob J. Post, b.
20 Feb 1839, NY; d. 27 Jul 1912, Cheboygan, MI. Nell became the second MacArthur sibling to move to
Cheboygan, MI. Her husband, Jacob Post, had a
retail hardware business in Cheboygan.
8.1 Sadie Post, adopted; m. Frank Shepherd
8.1.1 Cornelia
Shepherd
8.1.2 Helen
Shepherd
8.1.3 Patricia Shepherd
9. Harriet (Hattie) Melissa MacArthur,
b. 19 May 1843; m. Bergen Suydam
9.1 Belle
Suydam
9.2 Mary
Suydam
10. Isabel (Belle)
Eddith MacArthur, b. 18 Feb 1848; d. 1915; m. 12 Oct 1876, Conesus, NY, William
Harrison Mills, b. 24 Feb 1845, Groveland, NY; d. 21 Jan 1934, Jackson, MI; no
children. After the death of her mother, Belle lived with her
brother Alexander in Conesus, NY. Belles
husband became a very successful lumberman. The
couple lived in Conesus and then Rochester, NY.