Julia Wendell Butler — A “Real Daughter”
The Wendell family was of Dutch origin, emigrating to New York in 1640. At the outbreak of the American Revolutionary War, Thomas Wendell, with his wife Abigail and family, was living in Marblehead, Massachusetts. While in his aid to the Colonies, he was captured by the British and died on the prison ship Jersey in New York Harbor in 1777, leaving six children, the eldest being Julia’s father, Thomas, Jr.
Julia Wendell Butler joined the Mary Dillingham Chapter, NSDAR in 1906. She was the daughter of Thomas Wendell, who was born in Marblehead, Massachusetts, July 13, 1779, and died in Farmington, Maine, November 19, 1862; and Elizabeth Eaton, born in Farmington, April 6, 1774, and died June 17, 1843. Julia Wendell was born July 23, 1815, and married Francis G. Butler on July 23, 1842. They were the parents of four children. Julia died in 1907.
Thomas Wendell and Elizabeth Eaton were married in 1795 and had eleven children. He was a strong Congregationalist and was one of the founders of the Old South Congregational Church in Farmington. After his death in 1862, a memorial window was designed in his memory. He was an avid reader and took an interest in the establishment of the Farmington Academy in 1807. He served the town of Farmington as a selectman and surveyor of highways.