Thomas H. Rochester

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Thomas_H._Rochester an entity of type: Thing

Thomas Hart Rochester (September 23, 1797 – October 6, 1874) was the 6th son of Colonel Nathaniel Rochester and the 6th mayor of Rochester, New York. Rochester was born in Hagerstown, Maryland and moved with his family to Dansville, New York in 1810. Rochester was the first of his family to move to the land his father Nathaniel, Charles Carroll, and William Fitzhugh purchased next to the High Falls of the Genesee River. When his family followed him to the city two years later, he decided to move briefly to Missouri before returning and marrying Phebe E. Cuming, the daughter of the village of Rochester's first clergyman. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Thomas H. Rochester
rdf:langString Thomas Hart Rochester
rdf:langString Thomas Hart Rochester
xsd:date 1874-10-06
xsd:date 1797-09-23
xsd:integer 17613733
xsd:integer 1072528664
xsd:date 1797-09-23
xsd:date 1874-10-06
xsd:gMonthDay --05-06
rdf:langString Phebe E. Cuming
rdf:langString December 1839
rdf:langString December 1838
rdf:langString December 1838-December 1839
rdf:langString Thomas Hart Rochester (September 23, 1797 – October 6, 1874) was the 6th son of Colonel Nathaniel Rochester and the 6th mayor of Rochester, New York. Rochester was born in Hagerstown, Maryland and moved with his family to Dansville, New York in 1810. Rochester was the first of his family to move to the land his father Nathaniel, Charles Carroll, and William Fitzhugh purchased next to the High Falls of the Genesee River. When his family followed him to the city two years later, he decided to move briefly to Missouri before returning and marrying Phebe E. Cuming, the daughter of the village of Rochester's first clergyman. Rochester was selected by the Common Council as a Whig to be Mayor during the depression year of 1838. After his term, he became a banker and real estate developer before his death in 1874. He is interred in Mount Hope Cemetery. His Spring Street house served as the home of the Rochester Police Locust Club from 1921 to 1964. It was demolished in 1964.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 3578

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