Colonial and revolutionary families of Pennsylvania; genealogical and personal memoirs . h &Wilkes-Barre Coal Company, of which, December 1, 1899, he was appointedmechanical engineer, and on October 1, 1903, became chief engineer, a positionhe has filled to the present time. He is a member of the American Society ofMechanical Engineers and the American Institute of Mining Engineers. Hewas admitted a member of the Pennsylvania Society, Sons of the Revolutionas a lineal descendant of Major Nehemiah Wade, of the Essex county, NewJersey, troops, a martyr to the cause of national independence; and
Colonial and revolutionary families of Pennsylvania; genealogical and personal memoirs . h &Wilkes-Barre Coal Company, of which, December 1, 1899, he was appointedmechanical engineer, and on October 1, 1903, became chief engineer, a positionhe has filled to the present time. He is a member of the American Society ofMechanical Engineers and the American Institute of Mining Engineers. Hewas admitted a member of the Pennsylvania Society, Sons of the Revolutionas a lineal descendant of Major Nehemiah Wade, of the Essex county, NewJersey, troops, a martyr to the cause of national independence; and of Captains 868 BUNTING Asa and William Douglas, of the New England troops in the same Bunting is also a member of the Westmoreland Club, of Wilkes-Barre,Pennsylvania, of the Wyoming Historical and Geological Society, and theWyoming Valley Country Club. He married, at Scranton, Pennsylvania,January 2, 1901, Helen Romayne Seybolt, one of the five children of Calvinand Helen (White) Seybolt, of Scranton. They have one child, ElizabethDouglas Bunting, born May 15, CARSTAIRS COAT-OF-ARMS CARSTAIRS FAMILY The Carstairs family of Philadelphia, founded there by Thomas Carstairs,who came to America in 1780, from the parish of Largo, County Fife, Scot-land, is a very ancient one in Scotland. The Carstairs of Largo, where we find James Carstairs, an elder of thechurch of St. Andrews in 1652, were closely related to Rev. John Carstares,of Cathcart, Lanarkshire, near Glasgow, a member of the extreme Coven-anting Protestors of Scotland, whose distinguished son, Rev. William Car-stares (1649-1715), was the strenuous supporter of the Scottish Church, inti-mate friend of William, Prince of Orange, under whom as William I, King ofEngland, and his sucessor Queen Anne, he was Royal Chaplain of was one of the chief promoters of the Revolution Settlement, which freedthe Presbyterians from persecution. Alexander Carstairs, of the Damsyde of Straithearlie, parish of L
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