Person:Leonard Bradley (3)

Watchers
Leonard Bradley
m. 14 Apr 1785
  1. Huldah Bradley1785 - Bef 1821
  2. Clarissa Bradley1788 -
  3. Leonard Bradley1791 - 1875
  4. Jason Bradley1794 - 1878
  5. Grace Bradley1797 -
  6. Betsey Bradley1800 -
  7. Austin Bradley1803 -
m. 14 May 1862
  1. Alva Bradley1814 - 1885
  2. William Bradley1826 - 1901
  3. Julia Bradley1832 - 1899
Facts and Events
Name[1] Leonard Bradley
Gender Male
Birth? 4 Nov 1791 Ellington, Tolland, Connecticut
Marriage 14 May 1862 to Emily Thompson
Marriage to Roxanna Thrall
Death? 3 May 1875 Brownhelm Twp, Lorain, Ohio
Burial? Lots 3 & 4, Rugby Cemetery, Brownhelm Twp, Lorain, Ohio
Other? do Brownhelm Lorain 3511850 Census
Other? do Brownhelm Lorain 3931870 Census

From Cleveland Special Limited Edition, The Lewis Publishing Company, Chicago & New York, 1918 v. 1 pg. 231


Capt. Alva Bradley in the middle decades of the last century was easily one of the foremost figures in the shipping industry of the Great Lakes. His career was a progressive one. He began as a sailor before the mast, was a vessel master many years, and built and owned boats until the Bradley fleet was one of the largest under individual management on the lakes. With all due credit to her other sources of prosperity Cleveland is primarily a great port of commerce, and it would not be easy to over emphasize the part played by Captain Bradley in building up these transportation interests.

He was of New England birth and ancestry and at the same time represented one of the early pioneer families of the Ohio Western Reserve. He was born at Ellington, Connecticut, November 27, 1814, son of Leonard and Roxanna Bradley.

Leonard Bradley was born in the Town of Ellington, Tolland County, Connecticut, November 4, 1792. He migrated to Brownhelm, Ohio, in the year 1817, located lands, and remained two years, after which he returned to Connecticut and married Roxanna, daughter of William Thrall, of Tolland County, and immediately returned to Ohio, where he was identified as a pioneer farmer. By this union were born four children, viz., Capt. Alva Bradley; William Bradley, a resident of Brownhelm; Betsy, deceased; and Julia. Mrs. Leonard Bradley died February 25, 1858.

Mr. Bradley married for his second wife Emily, widow of William Nye, of Onondago (sic) County, New York, and daughter of John Thompson, who was of Scotch birth and ancestry. Mr. Bradley was an ardent advocate of republicanism during his latter days, being formerly a member of the old whig party, and served his township as trustee and in other offices from time to time. When a young man he carried a lady (who wished to visit friends, not having seen any white ladies in several months) over the Vermillion River on an ox, he riding one and the lady the other ox, the oxen having to swim on account of the depth of the stream.

Mr. Bradley remained on the old homestead until the date of his death, which occurred May 3, 1875. His wife survived him, still remaining on the old homestead, surrounded by many friends and tenderly cared for in her declining years by her children.

In 1823 the Bradley family gave up a home among the barren hills of New England and started for the new Connecticut of Ohio. A wagon carried them to Albany, New York, whence they journeyed by canal boat to Buffalo, and there took a small sailing vessel which carried them the rest of the way to Cleveland. This was Alva Bradley's first experience on the Great Lakes, and it is possible that at this time he received some of the impressions which seriously and permanently inclined him to a seafaring career and which caused him some ten years later, after he had gained his education in the common schools and had worked with his father to clear away woods and brush from the homestead near Brownhelm in Lorain County, to seek opportunity to become a sailor. It is said that he left his parents' home with all his possessions in a bundle and gained his first opportunity as a sailor on board the schooner Liberty. He worked before the masts on several vessels, including the Young Leopold, Edward Bancroft, Express and Commodore Lawrence. The first boat he sailed as master was Olive Branch, running in trade from the island to the South Shore ports of Lake Erie. This boat was owned by Captain Joseph P. Atkinson, and was a small vessel of only fifteen tons. He next had charge of the schooner Commodore Lawrence, owned by the Geauga Furnace Company of Vermillion. It was a boat of forty-seven tons, old measurement. He was next master in succession of the schooner South America, which, in association with Ahira Cobb, Captain Bradley built at Vermillion, a boat of about two hundred tons; the schooner Birmingham, also built at Vermillion by Mr. Burton Parsons and sold to the firm of Cobb & Bradley, who by that time had formed a close partnership in the vessel business; also the schooner Ellington. The firm of Bradley & Cobb constructed one of the first propellers operated on the Great Lakes, the old Indiana, of which Captain Bradley was master. The Indiana, of 350 tons, sailed between Buffalo and Chicago. Captain Bradley commanded all these boats and others and was active on the lakes as a sailor and master for about fifteen years.

Soon after the construction of the Indiana he came ashore and employed others to command his craft. He located his home at Vermillion, and there took active charge of the ship yards. A partial list of the vessels Captain Bradley built in later years is as follows, indicating the name of the boat, the year it was built, and its tonnage; The Challenge, 1853, 238; the Bay City, 1854, 190; the C. C. Griswold, 1855, 359; the Queen City, 1856, 358; the Wellington, 1856, 300; the Exchange, 1858, 390; the S. H. Kimball, 1861, 418; the Wagstaff, 1863, 412; the J. F. Card, 1864, 370; the Escanaba, 1865, 568; the Negaunee, 1867, 850. All of these at the particular time they were constructed was as large as could be handled through streams and at the dock.

From 1868 to 1882 Captain Bradley in association with others built eighteen vessels and at the time of his death it comprised a large fleet. In 1868 he centered all his interests at Cleveland, moving his shipyards to that city. He continued to build and float lake vessels at the rate of one each season. His business became so extensive that he deemed it economy to carry his own insurance, and considering the efficiency and carefulness of the organization he built up and his good fortune this was a step of wisdom and prudence. It is said that he never lost a vessel or had a wreck during his personal career as captain, and as a vessel owner only five boats were lost.

Captain Bradley was a man of simple, matter-of-fact character. His office was always exceedingly plain. For several years it was on Water Street and later in the Merchants National Bank Building at the corner of Superior and Bank streets. He was noted for the regularity of his habits. Like many old sailors he was a man of few words, though in his personal relations was not by any means stern and had a reserve fund of quiet by wearing geniality. One who knew him says that he had about "the brightest pair of eyes that ever twinkled in a man's head." He began life without a dollar, and was rated as one of the wealthy men of the city when he passed away at his home on Euclid Avenue November 28, 1885, just one day after his seventy-first birthday. His mother died at the old homestead at Brownhelm in 1858, his father dying about 1875.

In 1851 Captain Bradley married Helen M. Burgess, of Milan, Ohio. Mrs. Bradley died August 26, 1896. All the shipping interests around the Great Lakes recognized a distinct loss in the death of Captain Bradley, and his standing in business affairs is also indicated by the fact that resolutions of respect were offered by the Cleveland Board of Trade and the Savings & Trust Company.

His extensive business interests have been continued by his only son, Morris A. Bradley, who is in many ways a counterpart of his father, especially in his possession of quiet, unostentatious manners and his rugged business integrity. To Captain Bradley and wife were born four children, the son Morris being the third in age. The three daughters are: Mrs. Norman S. Keller, of Cleveland; Mrs. C. E. Grover, who died in December, 1886; and Mrs. C. F. Morehouse who died in 1894.

From Ancestors and Descendants of Morris A. Bradley


Nothing is known concerning Leonard's early life, but no doubt it was spent in or around Ellington. When he was twenty-three years old he was a soldier in the War of 1812, serving in Captain Strong's Company of Connecticut Militia, from Aug. 18, to October 26, 1814. For this service he received two warrants for Bounty Lands. On October 16, 1851, he was granted a warrant, number 21909, entitling him to forty acres. In 1853, he sold this to Thomas Harris of Lorain County, who in turn in 1854 assigned it to Bradley Adams of Saginaw County, Michigan, who took up forty acres of land at Genesee, Michigan, June 17, 1854.

Leonard's second Bounty Land warrant was granted on September 5, 1855, and consisted of one hundred and twenty acres. This warrant he disposed of in December of the same year. It passed through several hands and the land finally was located at Osage, Mitchell County, Iowa.

On April 5, 1871, Leonard Bradley, "aged 78 years", applied for a pension under the act of 14 February, 1871. This was granted and he received the sum of eight dollars per month.

The war record of Leonard Bradley for services in the War of 1812, and his application for Bounty Land and a pension, state that he was discharged from service, "about a month before Alva, his son, was born."

It is thought Leonard Bradley moved from Connecticut to Ohio about 1817 or 1819, located land in present day Lorain County, then returned to Connecticut and brought his wife and family to Ohio. [Leonard and Josiah Bradley are listed on an 1824 tax list for Lorain County as residents.] However, his first recorded purchase of land was in 1826, when he acquired lot 64 in Brownhelm, and later also possessed lot 65. From 1831 to 1849, he sold several parts of lot 64, and in 1865 he leased one hundred acres, being parts of lots 64 and 65, to the Vermilion Oil Company. In 1874, the year before Leonard's death, he disposed of another 4 acres of lot 64. This was his last land transaction. The lot 64 appears to have been his home farm, and on a plat of Brownhelm, dated 1874, the Bradley families are listed among those who lived "beyond the river."


The above publication lists Betsey Bradley, she who wed John Rohrbacker, as a child of Leonard Bradley. This is in error: Betsey was the widow of Sheldon Bradley, who most likely was a nephew of Leonard. The researcher for the book lists sources - Betsey's marriage to Rohrbacker is taken to mean she was a Bradley by birth. Further assumption along those lines by the author could make hash of the data.

From Rugby Cemetery, Brownhelm Township


LENT

    John B., adopted son Wm & A. Bradley, d July 2, 1871, 24y 3m 

BRADLEY

    William, May 10, 1826-Dec 1, 1901 
    Alvira Washburn, wife, Feb 3, 1838-Feb 22, 1921 
    Leonard, d May 3, 1875, 82y 6m 
    Emily T., wife L., d Sept 21, 1888, 83y 
    Roxie, wife Leonard, d Feb 25, 1858, 67y 
    Julia, Apr 16, 1832-Feb 15, 1899 

On the south side of North Ridge Road, somewhat west of Mill Hollow, the land [for Rugby Cemetery] was bought by the Brownhelm Township Trustees for $1.00 in 1832 from Leeds Hewitt & wife Sally.

References
  1. Mrs. Grant Rideout. BRADLEY: Ancesters and Descendants of Morris A. Bradley. (privately printed Cleveland 1948).