Actually, Marilyn, you probably do but just haven't found him/her yet. Keep digging. John Miranda Raposo
On Friday, April 28, 2017 11:46 AM, Marilyn Thompson <mari...@jmtmlt.com> wrote: Thank you John for this wonderful and informative article. I wish I had someone important enough to have such a rich history of their lives. Call me green with envy Marilyn On Fri, Apr 28, 2017 at 9:43 AM, Margaret Vicente <margaretvice...@gmail.com> wrote: John, Wonderful article and so complete. I will take me a while to digest it. May I email you privately as you may have the answer for my question with having all this background on the family? Thank you so much! Margaret On Fri, Apr 28, 2017 at 10:40 AM, 'John Raposo' via Azores Genealogy <azores@googlegroups.com> wrote: Margaret, This is from an article I wrote many years ago. Yankee Azoreans John Miranda Raposo This is not a work about the thousands of immigrants whohave come to New England from the nine islands of the Azores.Rather, this work is primarily concerned with the descendants of ThomasHickling, a Boston Yankee who settled on São Miguel and became the patriarch ofa large clan on both sides of the Atlantic. Thomas Hickling was born in Bostonon 21-2-1744 into the prosperous merchant family of William Hickling of Nottingham, Englandand Sarah Townsend Sale. At the age of eighteen, his father arranged anapprenticeship for him with the prosperous Green brothers and in 1764 hemarried their sister, Sarah Emily Green, fifteen years his senior, in Boston's old Trinity Church.[1] There is some speculationthat it was a marriage of convenience, arranged either for social or economicreasons, or both. In any event Hickling fulfilled his marital duty becoming thefather of two children by his first wife. Catherine Green Hickling was born in Salem in 1768 and WilliamGreen Hickling was born in 1765. Their father soon left his family and locatedto the Caribbean where he traded in molasses which he shipped back to hisfather's distillery in Boston.[2] He must have been anenterprising sort, for he perceived the commercial possibilities in the Azoresbecause in 1769 be was living in Ponta Delgada. Thomas Hickling never returned to America andnever lived anywhere else. He became one of the principal developers of the orangetrade, the export of oranges to England,which became the basis for the colossal fortunes of many of São Miguel's socially prominent families and paid for the constructionof many a palácio, those grand manorhouses with their lovely English and French gardens still seen throughout theisland. In 1820 Hickling exported nearly 5,700 crates or oranges and 2,000crates of lemons from Ponta Delgada.But the firm of his sons-in-law Ivens & Burnett exported over 11,000crates.[3] At the height of the orange age 93% of the oranges producedin São Miguel were exported. Butthe Hicklings and many other "gentlemen farmers" were brought tofinancial ruin at the end of the century when the orange trade came to an end,victim of a blight that first attacked the orange groves in 1834, again in 1860and finally destroyed the remaining groves at the end of the century. Thefinancial ruin resulted in a reduced standard of living for these"gentlemen farmers", many of whom could no longer afford the upkeepon their lovely homes and gardens. Manycan still be seen in the suburbs surrounding Ponta Delgada and Lagoa, their dilapidated state a silent witness toboth the greatness and the misery of the age.[4] News traveled slowly and it must have been months beforeHickling learned that Sarah Green, the wife he had last seen twelve yearsearlier, had died in Bostonin May of 1774. He could not have mourned her death very much for not longafter, in February 1778, the youngwidower married Suzanne Sarah Falder of Philadelphia,fifteen years his junior. It must have been love at first sight since the youngSarah just happened to be passing through Ponta Delgada in the company of her father, Thomas Falder.Between the time of their marriage and 1808 they produced 16 children, all bornin São Miguel, including two sets of twins.[5] Thus, came into being thefirst generation of Yankee Azoreans. Throughout his lifetime on São Miguel,the Protestant Hickling was very ecumenical; whenever a Protestant minister wasunavailable at the frequent arrivals of new Hicklings, he had them baptized in theCatholic Church.[6] In 1776 Thomas Hickling was appointed American Vice Consulin Ponta Delgada,a post he held until his death some fifty years later. Hickling became sociallyprominent and popular for his sincerity and friendliness. His diplomatic andsocial positions on the island made him a natural good will ambassador whooften received and entertained visiting foreigners. Over the years his businessventures made him a fabulously wealthy man and he built three magnificentestates on the island. In 1792 he was living on Rua da Misericórdia. His first manor house with a curved northernside and curved outer steps leading to what must have been a magnificent lawn,was built in Rosto do Cão in the parish of São Roque on the outskirts of PontaDelgada.[7] In 1812 he began building the Palácio de São Pedro. Built in theGeorgian colonial style, it cost Hickling nearly $30,000.00, a huge fortune atthe time and it was considered the grandest private residence on the islandwell into the second half of the 19th century.[8] It still stands today atthe water's edge in the eastern end of Ponta Delgada as the Hotel São Pedro,the grand dame of hotels, lovinglypreserved and filled with period furniture, by its late proprietor, VascoBensaúde. But it is Hickling’s TerraNostra park and botanical gardens in Furnas that stands as a perpetualmonument to his memory. Hickling chose the Furnas valley to build his summerhome in 1782, which he appropriately named YankeeHall. Furnas is blessed with thermal springs of warm water and Hicklingbuilt his home on high land facing o Tanque, a natural pool fed by these warmsprings. All around the house Hickling began developing what eventually becamea magnificent botanical garden, planting many specimens from America andfrom other lands where he maintained commercial interests. For the rest of hislife, Hickling divided his time among his three estates. Thomas Hickling died in Ponta Delgadaon 31 August 1836 and lies buried in the protestant Cemetery. He was succeeded as vice-consul by his sonThomas, Jr. (1781-1875). Sarah Falder died in 1849 and was buried beside herhusband. In 1848, with the financial crisis caused by the firstattack of blight to the orange groves, YankeeHall and the gardens were sold to the Marquês da Praia who restored andexpanded Hickling’s masterpiece.[9] So grand an estate did itbecome, that his descendant put the house and estate at the disposal of theKing and Queen during their visit to the island in 1901. In 1970 the island's government formally recognized ThomasHickling’s place in Azorean history and horticulture by erecting a monument tohis memory close by the entrance of his beloved Yankee Hall. The AzoreanHicklings: the descendants of Thomas Hickling §1 1 - Thomas Hickling was born in Boston on 21-2-1744 to William Hicking andSarah Sale. He was married in Boston on 22-8-1764 to Sarah Emily Green,daughter of Rufus King andKatherine Stanbridge, who died in 1774. In February 1778 in Ponta Delgada, hemarried Sarah Falder, daughter of Thomas and Elizabeth Falder. He was Vice Consul ofthe United States in Ponta Delgada from hisappointment in 1776 until his death on 1Sept 1834. Sarah Falder died in Ponta Delgada in 1849.[10] By his first wifehe had: 2 - CatherineGreen Hickling (1768-1852) , visited her father and his estates in São Miguel from1786 to 1788 and it is from her diaries, portions of which were published inInsulana[11] that we know about herfather's activities and his projects as well aswhat the island's gardens looked like in 1786. She married William Prescott andthey became the parents of several children, three of whom survived infancy.Among them was the celebrated author and historian William Hickling Prescott(1796-1859) who visited with his grandfather in 1815.[12] 2 - WilliamHickling was born in Bostonon 14 June 1765. He died in 1794. ThomasHickling and his second wife Sarah Falder were the parents of[13]: 2 - MaryHickling (c. 1778-1805) married John Anglin of County Cork.After her death,John Anglin married his sister-in-law Ana Joaquina. 2 -Elizabeth Flora Hickling (1783-1832) married William Breakspeare Ivens, an armigerous English gentleman, in 1805, who was in the Azoreswith his friend WilliamShelton Burnett on a business venture. George III granted him a coat of arms in1816. Both men fell in love with Hickling sisters. By the time he died in1851, the orange blight and a financial scandal left him and his family in financial ruin.[14] Theywere the parents of eight children, among them: 3 - Robert Breakspeare Ivens was born inPonta Delgadaon 9 Mar 1822 and died in Lisbonon 20 Feb 1889. He was married to Luisa Soares Borralho by whom he had two children. ByMargarida Júlia de Medeiros Castelo Branco, born in Água de Pau in 1832 to José Jacinto Raposo do Rego Castelo Branco and his wife Ana Jacinta Matilde, he had two illegitimate children:[15] 4- Roberto Ivens was born in Ponta Delgada on 12 June 1850 and died in Lisbonon 28 Jan 1898. He was a famous geographer and explorer of the African continent. The expedition to the African continent by Ivens and Brito Capelo, rankswith the exploration of the Louisiana Purchaseby the Americans Lewis and Clark. A monument to his memory stands in Ponta Delgada near the Esperança Convent. 4 - Duarte Ivens was born in Ponta Delgada on 31 Aug1852. 2 - SarahClarissa Hickling (1783-1849) married her brother-in-law's friend, William Shelton Burnett. 2 - AnaJoaquina Hickling (1785-1824) and John Anglin have descendants in the UnitedStates as well as in the Azores. A grandson, Dr. João Hickling Anglin, was therector of the local lyceum and was a respected researcher who published many scholarlyworks. 2 - CharlotteSophia Hickling (1787-1877) married Jacinto Soares de Albergaria. 2 - FrancesHickling (1789-1867) married Joaquim António de Paula Medeiros, a localphysician. They have many descendants in São Miguel,some of whom have marriedinto the local nobility. 2 - FrederickHickling was born on 1 Oct 1791 and died in August 1794. 2 - HarrietFrederica Hickling (1793-1853) married John White Webster, a Harvard professor. He met Harriet while doing someresearch on the geological formation of theisland.[16] The salary of a Harvardprofessor was more an honorarium in thosedays, than a decent salary. Harriet aspired to social prominence and entertained lavishly at their Cambridge, Massachusetts home, spending well beyondher means. Professor Webster went into debt to support his wife's lifestyle. One of his creditors, Professor George Parkman, pressedWebster for repaymentand threatened to take legal action which would have ruined Webster. ProfessorWebster murdered Parkman and dismembered and incinerated the body.Nevertheless he was discovered, tried, condemned and was hanged in August1850. Commonwealth of Massachusetts vs.John White Webster, became one ofthe most famous cases in American jurisprudence because of the missing corpus delicti.[17] Two oftheir daughters went on to marry Dabneys from Faial,another Yankee familyestablished in the Azores. Harriet WainrightWebster married Samuel WyllysDabney, who was United States Consul in Horta.[18] The Consulship of Horta passed on to succeeding Dabneygenerations, as did the Vice-consulship of Ponta Delgada tosucceeding Hickling generations. The Dabneys resigned their consulship in 1891 when a new State Department rule prohibited consular officialsfrom engaging in commercial enterprises in their posts. Wyllys and his familyreturned to the United Statesand established Fayal Ranch in California.[19] 2 - SamuelHickling (1795-1799). 2 - AmeliaClementina Hickling (1796-1872) married Hugh Chambers in 1822 and settledwith her husband in New Bedfordwhere he died in 1823. She was pregnantand returned to the Azores where her daughterEmmeline was born in 1823. Amelia then married Thomas Nye in New Bedford in 1827 andhad several morechildren. 3 -Emmeline married Edward Coffin Jones of Nantucket in 1844 and they lived in the magnificent Rotch-Jones-Duff mansion, today a house and garden museum open to the public in New Bedford. 2 - Mary AnneHickling (1800-1888) married her brother-in-law, William Ivens, in 1833 inthe Protestant Chapel in Ponta Delgada.They had several children. One daughter,Catherine (1836-1933) married Ricardo Júlio Ferraz and they are the ancestorsof a very numerous Ivens-Ferraz family, including Generals, Admirals, FinanceMinisters and a Prime Minister of Portugal.[20] Senator John ForbesKerry: the Hickling Connection Edward Coffin Jones and Emmeline Hickling Chambers were theparents of Sarah Coffin Jones (1852-1891) who married John Malcolm Forbes(1874-1904), a railroad company executive and a great-grandson of the ReverendJohn Forbes (1740-1783) and Dorothy Murray. They had several children. AfterSarah’s death, John Malcolm Forbes married Emmeline’s cousin Rose Dabney(1864-1947) and they had three children. Rose Dabney was the granddaughter ofHarriet Frederica Hickling and the ill fated Professor John White Webster. Senator John Forbes Kerry (1943- ) is the son of RichardKerry and Rosemary Forbes, maternalgrandson of James Grant Forbes (1879-1955), and great grandson of FrancisBlackwell Forbes (1839-1908). Francis Blackwell Forbes is also a great-grandsonof the Reverend John Forbes and his wife Dorothy. Thus, Thomas Hickling’sdescendants by his great granddaughters Rose Dabney and Sarah Coffin Jones, andthe descendants of Francis Blackwell Forbes and his wife Isabel Clark, arecousins. Former presidential candidateSenator John Forbes Kerry, like his Hickling cousins, is a great-grandson ofFrancis Blackwell Forbes. If there is an after life, Thomas Hickling must have anenormous grin on his patrician face. [1] José Manuel Bela Morais, “Descendants of ThomasHickling”, MS, Lisbon,n.d. [2] Isabel Soares de Albergaria, Quintas, Jardins e Parques da Ilha de São Miguel, Lisbon, Queluz Editores: 2000.[3]Sacuntalade Miranda, O Ciclo da Laranja e os gentlemenfarmers da Ilha de S. Miguel: 1780-1880, Ponta Delgada: InstitutoCultural de Ponta Delgada: 1989.[4]Sacuntalade Miranda.[5] Francis MilletRogers, “Boston Brahmins in the Azores” Atlantic Islanders of the Azores and Madeiras, North Quincy:The Christopher Publishing House: 1979.[6] BelaMorais,“Descendants of Thomas Hickling”.[7] FrancisMillet Rogers, “Boston Brahmins in the Azores” Atlantic Islanders of the Azores and Madeiras, [8] BelaMorais,“Descendants of Thomas Hickling”.[9] Isabel Soaresde Albergaria.[10] José Manuel Bela Morais, “Descendants of ThomasHickling”, MS, Lisbon,n.d. Francis Millet Rogers, “Boston Brahmins in the Azores” Atlantic Islanders of the Azores and Madeiras, North Quincy:The Christopher Publishing House: 1979.[11] Catherine Green Hickling, Diário: 1786-1789 in Insulana,Ponta Delgada,Instituto Cultural de Ponta Delgada: 1993. [12]Authorof The Conquest of Mexico, The World of the Aztecs, The World of the Incas, History of the Reign of Ferdinand andIsabella, the Catholic, The Conquestof Peru, The Rise and decline of theSpanish Empire. [13]Theseare the children which this author has been able to document.[14] José Manuel Bela Morais, et al, Ivens Ferraz: Origens e sua Descendência, Lisbon: 1999.[15]Franciscode Simas Alves de Azevedo, in Centenário:Hermengildo Capelo e Roberto Ivens, Conferências e Comunicações. Comissãodas Comemorações do Primeiro Centenário da Travessa da África por HermengildoCapelo e Roberto Ivens, Academia Portuguesa da História. Lisbon: 19-6-1985.Carlos Maria Machado, Genealogias, MS,Biblioteca e Arquivo Regional de Ponta Delgada, n.d. [16]JohnWhite Webster, A description of the island of St. Michael, comprising an account ofits geological structure. Boston:1821.[17]HelenThomson, Murder at Harvard, Boston, Houghton Miffin:1971.Robert Sullivan, TheDisappearance of Dr. Parkman, Little, Brown, Boston: 1971.[18] He was the son of the second consul, Charles WilliamDabney and grandson of the first consul, John Bass Dabney. (see Joseph C. Abdo, "TheDabney Family of Faial" and Francis Millet Rogers, “Boston Brahmins in the Azores”)[19] Bela Morais, “Descendants of Thomas Hickling”.[20] Ibid. On Friday, April 28, 2017 9:18 AM, Margaret Vicente <margaretvice...@gmail.com> wrote: Hello, Does anyone in the list have a complete list (including deceased children) of the well known - Thomas Hickling and of his 2nd wife Sarah Faldes? who lived and died in Ponta Delgada, island of S. Miguel? Mr. Hickling was from Boston, USA. His 2nd wife was from Philadelphia. Because they were not Catholics their marriage is not in the Church records. Hoping some savvy research may be able to help. I'm also looking for a correct timeline of when his first wife died in Boston. Trying to reconcile the the two marriages. Thank you. -- Margaret M Vicente-- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Azores Genealogy" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to azores+unsubscribe@googlegroup s.com. Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/grou p/azores. -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Azores Genealogy" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to azores+unsubscribe@googlegroup s.com. Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/grou p/azores. -- Margaret M Vicente-- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Azores Genealogy" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to azores+unsubscribe@ googlegroups.com. Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/ group/azores. -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Azores Genealogy" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to azores+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com. Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/azores. -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Azores Genealogy" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to azores+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com. Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/azores.