Louisa W. Pitkin was born on 15 April 1840. Married Timothy J. Skilton Parents: Timothy Pitkin and Catherine L. Woodbridge.


Lovinia Pitkin was born on 19 April 1835. Lovinia and her family resided in Delaware County, Ohio. Called Lidia in the 1850 census. Parents: Horace Pitkin and Cyrena Burnap.

Spouse: Brainard Willis. Lovinia Pitkin and Brainard Willis were married on 12 February 1857. Children were: Charles O. Willis, Frederic P. Willis, Cora L. Willis.


Lowell Dale Pitkin was born on 19 March 1947 in Forest City, Iowa. Lowell lived in Robbinsdalem Minnesota. He married Karin ______. Parents: Dale Howard Pitkin and Lillian Gladys Peterson.


Lucia Pitkin was born on 19 January 1802. She died on 23 September 1802 at the age of 0. Parents: Thomas W. Pitkin and Mary Bill.


Lucille Pitkin was born in Garner, Iowa. Lucille married Richard Wyma. They were missionaries in Bolivia. Parents: Earl Valentine Pitkin and Emma M. Hanson.


Lucinda Pitkin was born on 11 March 1814. Married Arthur Pendleton. Parents: Elijah Pitkin and Sarah Hale.


Lucinda A. Storrs Pitkin was born in February 1852. As her mother died when she was less than a month old, Lucinda was adopted and raised by her grandfather, Dudley Pitkin. She was thereafter called Lucinda Storrs Pitkin. Parents: John Storrs and Lucinda W. Pitkin.


Lucinda W. Pitkin was born on 25 August 1828. She died on 1 February 1852 at the age of 23. Parents: Dudley Pitkin and Nancy Batchelder.

Spouse: John Storrs. Lucinda W. Pitkin and John Storrs were married in 1851. Children were: Lucinda A. Storrs Pitkin.


Lucius Pitkin was born on 1 March 1805. He died on 3 September 1806 at the age of 1. Parents: Thomas W. Pitkin and Mary Bill.


Lucius Pitkin was born on 4 October 1812. He died on 12 October 1867 at the age of 55. Married Ellen Frances Wood. Parents: Thomas W. Pitkin and Mary Bill.


Lucius Burke Pitkin was born on 30 May 1880. He died in 1957 at the age of 77 in Denver, Colorado. Parents: Charles A. Pitkin and Almira M. Schenck.

Spouse: Gladys Bowen Jones. Gladys Bowen Jones and Lucius Burke Pitkin were married on 5 September 1918 in Denver, Colorado. Children were: Lucius D. Pitkin, Charles Dudley Pitkin.


Lucius D. Pitkin was born in 1919. He died in 1919 at the age of 0. Parents: Lucius Burke Pitkin and Gladys Bowen Jones.


Lucius M. Pitkin was born on 17 May 1825. He died about 1899 at the age of 74. Lucius lived in Cleveland, Ohio, where he was president of Variety Iron Works.

Lucius Pitkin Killed. The well known capitalist hurled to death by the Lake Shore Flyer.
Lucius Pitkin, president of the Variety Iron works Co., was struck by the Lake Shore flyer at Coit's station at 7:30 o'clock Saturday morning and instantly killed.
At the time the accident occurred a large number of people were waiting at the station to take the accommodation train for Cleveland. Mr. Pitkin's home is but a short distance from the station. The Lake Shore flyer was due a few minutes before the accommodation train; many of the people were looking down the track for the flyer to appear. Several of them observed Mr. Pitkin walking along the track to the station, but all presumed that he was aware of the fact that the flyer was due.
Suddenly the roar of the train was heard and in the excitement which usually attends the arrival of a train Mr. Pitkin was for the time forgotten. The next moment the people on the platform were horrified to see Mr. Pitkin thrown high in the air and for some distance from the track. As soon as the flyer had gone a rush was made for the spot where Mr. Pitkin had fallen. Life was extinct and the body was horribly mangled.
Among those who saw the accident was Mr. O.P. Clay, Mr. Pitkin's son-in-law. Deputy Coroner West was notified and at once left for the scene of the accident.
Mr. Pitkin was about seventy-four years of age. His wife died about a year ago. He was one of the most widely known of Cleveland's wealthy men. Mr. Pitkin's Daughter, Mrs. O.P. Clay, and her husband lived with him.
The deceased was known as a man of great public spirit and was a warm friend of the school system of the city. In the year 1864 he was elected a member of the board of education and during the two years of his service with that body was very energetic. He was made president of the board in 1865.
In his business relations Mr. Pitkin was one of Cleveland's most widely known men. He was one of the great manufacturers of the city and Cleveland owes much to his great energy and wisdom in the transaction of his affairs.
He first came to this city in 1852 from Waitsfield, Vt., and was married here in 1855 to Mrs Sarah Chamberlain. He had one daughter, Mrs. O.P. Clay. When he first came to Cleveland he entered business life as the proprietor of a meat market at the corner of Huron and Prospect streets. Afterwards he went into the business of manufacturing hats at Cincinnati, but later returned to Cleveland and in 1868 organized the Cleveland Malleable Iron Co., now the Cleveland Malleable Casting Co., of which he was the president. From the time of the formation of the Variety Iron Works Co. he was its head. Parents: Dudley Pitkin and Nancy Batchelder.

Spouse: Sarah B. Shepard. Sarah B. Shepard and Lucius M. Pitkin were married on 26 April 1854. Children were: Willis Pitkin, Ina F. Pitkin.


Lucretia Pitkin was born (date unknown). Parents: William Pitkin and Abigail Church.


Lucy Pitkin was born on 23 October 1764. She died in February 1853 at the age of 88. Married Deacon Samuel Reynolds. Parents: Thomas Pitkin and Martha White.


Lucy Pitkin was born in 1768. Married Benjamin Ingraham. Parents: Jonathan Pitkin and Lucy Steele.


Lucy Pitkin was born on 6 February 1784. She died on 20 February 1856 at the age of 72. Married Robert Ellis - two children, Robert and Thomas
Married 2nd, Joseph Bl Abrams - two children survived childhood, Lucy and Mary. Parents: Thomas White Pitkin and Rhoda Marsh.


Lucy Pitkin was born on 9 August 1797. She died on 4 July 1852 at the age of 54. Married Calvin N. Barber. Parents: John Pitkin and Rebecca Andrus.


Lucy Pitkin was born on 8 February 1823. She died on 5 February 1840 at the age of 16. Parents: Dr. Samuel Pitkin and Elizabeth Hamlin.


Lucy A. Pitkin was born on 15 January 1819. Married Henry Dennison Frink, May 1, 1845. Four children. Parents: Allen Pitkin and Persis Steadman.


Lucy A. Pitkin was born on 3 August 1824. She died on 31 May 1850 at the age of 25. Married George W. Adams. Parents: Jonathan Pitkin and Betsey Cummings.


Lucy Emily Pitkin was born on 22 February 1835. Married Thomas H. Tucker. Parents: John Owen Pitkin and Lucy Makens Merrow.


Lucy Mary Pitkin was born on 29 December 1823. She died on 11 September 1840 at the age of 16. Died of typhus fever. She was buried at Eaton Cemetery in Marshfield, Vermont. Parents: George Pitkin and Lucy Farrington.


Luther Gager Pitkin was born on 24 June 1916 in Coventry, Vermont. Date from Leslie Leggett Parents: Robert William Pitkin and Minnie M. Chamberlain.

Spouse: Phyllis Glendine Rhodes. Phyllis Glendine Rhodes and Luther Gager Pitkin were married on 4 November 1939. Date from Leslie Leggett. Children were: Arthur Ritchie Pitkin, Leslie Pitkin.


Luther S. Pitkin was born on 11 March 1849. Parents: Erwin Pitkin and Marcia White.


Luvanne W. Pitkin was born on 9 June 1836. She died on 17 February 1882 at the age of 45. Luvanne and her family farmed in Bloomfield, Pickaway County, Ohio. Called Louisa in the 1850 census. Parents: Horace Pitkin and Cyrena Burnap.

Spouse: Jonathan W. Huston. Luvanne W. Pitkin and Jonathan W. Huston were married on 5 January 1854. Children were: Felix Huston, Edward Huston, Lincoln Huston, James Huston, Harry Huston, Nelson Huston, Franklin W. Huston, Maud H. Huston, Grace Huston, Charles R. Huston, Luvanne Huston.


Lydia Carpenter Pitkin was born on 15 April 1984 in Berlin, Vermont. Lydia grew up in Cabot and attended the Cabot School. She enjoyed riding bikes, watching Star Trek on television, and Doctor Quinn, Medicine Woman. She was very good to her sister, Hannah, and the two girls often played together, although not always nicely. Lydia was an exceptionally bright and able scholar, and had a warm sense of humor. In 1994-96 she took saxophone lessons.. In 1992 and 1993 she took piano lessons from the honorable Andrew Christiansen of East Montpelier, Vermont. She was also a follower and admirer of Gary Larson's warped sense of humor. Sometimes (this is written by request) she got rather irritated with her father. Her bedtime was always a little earlier than she wished it to be. A prolific writer, Lydia often wrote in solitude. In 2002, Lydia finished her senior year of high school at the Vermont Technical College. Majored in anthropology at the University of Vermont, and in 2007 completed a Masters of Archaeology at the University of Nottingham, UK. in 2008 she was working for the Vermont Secretary of State as an administrator in the department of professional regulation. Also in 2008, lived in Burlington, VT. with her friend, Brock Miller. Parents: Caleb Whitney Pitkin and Mary Adele Carpenter.

Spouse: Brock Miller. Lydia Carpenter Pitkin and Brock Miller were married on 6 September 2009 in Burlington, Vermont. Children were: Bella Grace Miller, Owen Wallace Pitkin Miller.


Lyman C. Pitkin was born on 12 February 1814. He died on 2 March 1843 at the age of 29. Parents: Jonathan Pitkin and Betsey Cummings.


Mabel Pitkin was born (date unknown). Mabel married Caleb Bushnell. Parents: Jonathan Pitkin and Rebecca Smith.


Mabel Pitkin was born on 5 December 1695 in East Hartford, Connecticut. She died on 19 December 1695 at the age of 0. Parents: Roger Pitkin and Hannah Stanley.


Mabel Pitkin was born on 23 March 1700 in East Hartford, Connecticut. Mabel married James Porter. Parents: Roger Pitkin and Hannah Stanley.


Mabel Pitkin was born in 1775. She died on 20 September 1851 at the age of 76. Married Eliphalet Elmore. Parents: Jonathan Pitkin and Lucy Steele.


Maggie Pitkin was born on 23 October 1865. Parents: Erastus Pitkin and Emily Barnes.


Margaret Caroline Pitkin was born in 1892. She died on 4 December 1899 at the age of 7. Margaret died of spinal meningitis. She was buried at Greenmount Cemetery in Montpelier, Vermont. There is a statue of Margaret in the Greenmount Cemetery in Montpelier which inspired Dan Lindner to write "Song for Margaret" in 1985 or so.

"Fresh fallen snow on the newly dug grave of the girl with the sunlight in her smile,
Gathered around, all the many who loved her, whose lives she brightened for a while,
All the laughter and love in her seven short years were much more than some folks ever see,
Fare thee well, Margaret, you rest here in peace, while we cherish your sweet memory.

"A labor of love for the man from the old world who works all alone in the night,
Lost in his thoughts as the chips fall away and the child seems to come back to life.
Faithfully rendered by rough skillful hands, lovely features emerge from the stone.
His tears gently fall on the face that he forms, for the old man has memories of his own.

"Silent she stands in her old fashioned dress, just a small figure frozen in time,
Patient and calm as the world struggles on, for she's left all her cares far behind.
And many who wander by her grave on the hill stop and leave her a penny or two,
And each copper coin bears a wish and a prayer for the happiness that she once knew.

"Time flies away like the brown leaves of autumn, like cold ashes thrown to the wind.
Sweet moments of joy are the glittering jewels that we hold 'til our memories grow dim." Parents: Carroll Perley Pitkin and Mary Ann Devine.


Maria Pitkin was born on 16 January 1826. She died on 1 June 1881 at the age of 55. Parents: Timothy Pitkin and Mary Chapman.


Maria Wyman Pitkin was born on 19 September 1827. She died on 23 January 1853 at the age of 25. Maria married in June, 1850, Charles Carpenter, a lawyer in Deleware, Ohio. Called Maranda in the 1850 census. Parents: Horace Pitkin and Cyrena Burnap.


Marianna L. Pitkin was born on 5 April 1836. She died on 3 September 1862 at the age of 26. Parents: Gen. Samuel Leonard Pitkin and Mary A. Lewis.


Marie Pitkin was born in January 1891. Parents: Albert Henry Pitkin and Ella Rudge.


Marilla Pitkin was born on 13 November 1802. She died on 31 December 1810 at the age of 8. Parents: Timothy Pitkin and Sybil Cowles.


Marjorie Marie Pitkin was born on 6 February 1922. Parents: Harry E. Pitkin and Gladys Hoffman.


Martha Pitkin was born (date unknown). Martha married Mr. Forbes. Parents: Jonathan Pitkin and Rebecca Smith.


Martha Pitkin was born (date unknown). Martha married Rev. Edward Eels. Parents: Capt. Ozias Pitkin and Elizabeth Green.


Martha Pitkin was born in 1612 in Berkhamsted, England. She died in 1612 at the age of 0 in Berkhamsted, England. She was christened on 17 October 1612. Martha was buried in December 1612. Parents: William Pitkin MP and Jane White.


Martha Pitkin was born in 1618 in Berkhamsted, England. She was christened on 14 March 1618 in Berkhamsted, England. Parents: William Pitkin MP and Jane White.


Martha Pitkin was born in 1639 in Berkhamsted, England. She was baptized on 12 December 1639 in Saint Peters Church. She died on 13 October 1719 at the age of 80 in Connecticut. When Martha came to America in 1661 to persuade her brother William to return to England, her brother Roger was an officer in the Royal Army. When she found her scholarly brother William laboring like a servant on his plantation, she is said to have exclaimed: "I left one brother serving his king, I find my other brother serving swine." At the time, she was 22 years old, beautiful, accomplished and witty. Dr. Thomas Robbins recorded in his diary: "This girl put the Colony in commotion. If possible she must be detained: The stock was too valuable to be parted with. Became a matter of general consultation, what young man was good enough to be presented to Miss Pitkin. Simon Wolcott, of Windsor, was fixed upon and, beyond expectation, succeeded in obtaining her hand." The Wolcotts were a prominent family, having political and business connections in England and Connecticut. Martha's life in the New World was one of hardships. In 1671 Simon sold his place in Windsor and removed to Simsbury, where he had received a grant of land. This change proved most unfortunate, as the settlers were driven from the place by the Indians and their property destroyed. Even Martha's pewter dishes, which her husband concealed in a swamp, could never be found. They returned to Windsor for a few years, but rents were high and difficult to obtain, and Simon may have found his growing debts more intolerable than the possible depredations of Indians on the east side of the river where he owned land. In any case, he ventured to move the family and possessions there in 1680. Their youngest son Roger wrote in his journal: "In the year 1680 my father settled on his own Land on the east side of the river, everything was to begin, few families were settled there. We had neither Minister nor school, by which it hath come to pass that I never was a Scholar in any school a day in my life: My parents took great care and pains to learn their children and were successful with the rest but not with me by reason of my extreme dullness to learn [He must have learned something. Roger was made governor of Connecticut in 1750]. On Sept. 11, 1687, dyed my honored father in the 62d year of his age: it was just before the coming of Sir Edmund Andross. It was generally expected that persecution for religion would soon ensue: it filled him with agonizing fears and excited his fervent prayers for deliverance, but God took him away from the evil he feared to come." Though Martha was left with six of her children to provide for, the land uncleared, and the estate in debt, Roger was able to add "but we never wanted," a statement that speaks volumes about Martha's character. She later married Daniel Clark. Roger wrote of his mother: "1719, dyed my honoured mother Mrs Martha Clark in the 80th year of her age. She was a gentlewoman of bright natural parts, which were well improved by her education in the City of London. She came to New England in 1661, the same year she was marryed to my father. The rest of her useful life she spent in the wilderness doing good and setting an example of piety, prudence, charity, and patience." Roger's son Oliver was a signer of the Declaration of Independence, and later Governor of Connecticut. Roger's daughter, Ursula married Matthew Griswold of Lyme, who became governor of Connecticut, and among their descendants are twelve governors, thirty six judges, and many other eminent professionals. The Wolcott family was equaled only by the Pitkin family for its contributions to the political, economic and religious development of Connecticut. Because of the contributions of so many of her descendants to the cause of American independence, and because of the ability, patriotism, and prominence of her family in the early history of Connecticut, the East Hartford and South Windsor Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution bears the name of Martha Pitkin Wolcott. Parents: Rev. William Pitkin and Elizabeth .

Spouse: Simon Wolcott. Martha Pitkin and Simon Wolcott were married on 17 October 1661 in Hartford, Connecticut. Children were: Elizabeth Wolcott, Martha Wolcott, Simon Wolcott, Joanna Wolcott, Lieut. Henry Wolcott, Christopher Wolcott, Mary Wolcott, William Wolcott, Roger Wolcott.


Martha Pitkin was born on 28 February 1692. She died on 4 July 1763 at the age of 71. Martha married the Hon. Thomas Wells. Parents: William Pitkin and Elizabeth Stanley.


Martha Pitkin was born on 8 February 1745. She died on 1 November 1754 at the age of 9. Parents: Thomas Pitkin and Martha White.


Martha Pitkin was born on 8 September 1755. Married Anderson Miner. Parents: Thomas Pitkin and Martha White.


Martha Pitkin was born on 8 July 1826. Martha was unmarried. Parents: Dudley Pitkin and Nancy Batchelder.


Martha M. Pitkin was born on 31 August 1827. Martha married Jason C. Hoyte. No children. Parents: Harris Pitkin and Martha (Patty) Bemis.