|
__
|
__|__
|
_Zachariah SICKLES __|
| (.... - 1766) |
| | __
| | |
| |__|__
|
_Daniel SICKLES _____|
| (1744 - 1815) m 1791|
| | __
| | |
| | __|__
| | |
| |_Sarah SEARS ________|
| (.... - 1796) |
| | __
| | |
| |__|__
|
_William Henry SICKLES _|
| (1807 - 1870) m 1845 |
| | __
| | |
| | __|__
| | |
| | _John BRADLEY _______|
| | | |
| | | | __
| | | | |
| | | |__|__
| | |
| |_Rebecca BRADLEY ____|
| (1775 - 1845) m 1791|
| | __
| | |
| | __|__
| | |
| |_____________________|
| |
| | __
| | |
| |__|__
|
|
|--George Garrett SICKLES
| (1846 - 1902)
| __
| |
| __|__
| |
| _____________________|
| | |
| | | __
| | | |
| | |__|__
| |
| _____________________|
| | |
| | | __
| | | |
| | | __|__
| | | |
| | |_____________________|
| | |
| | | __
| | | |
| | |__|__
| |
|_Mary Ann ROBINSON _____|
(1816 - 1873) m 1845 |
| __
| |
| __|__
| |
| _____________________|
| | |
| | | __
| | | |
| | |__|__
| |
|_____________________|
|
| __
| |
| __|__
| |
|_____________________|
|
| __
| |
|__|__
[221] George's obituary from the Brooklyn Daily Eagle, dated June 17, 1902:
[223]
"George G. Sickles died yesterday in the Long Island College Hospital. He was a first cousin to General Daniel E. Sickles. He was born in Manhattan in 1846 and removed to Brooklyn in 1855. At the outbreak of the Civil War, he enlisted in the
Forty-seventh Regiment of New York, and afterward served in the Thirty-seventh New Jersey Volunteers. Mr. Sickles was a prominent member of the G.A.R., and at the time of his death held the post of past commander of Middleton Post. He took an
active interest in politics and was for years one of the Republican leaders in the Eleventh Ward of this borough. He was engaged in the tobacco trade for thirty years. He had been an occasional contributor to the Eagle. His widow, one son,
George G., jr., and three brothers survive him."
[225] According to family tradition, George was the city weigher of New York - a position he secured through the political influence of his cousin General Daniel E. Sickles. City directories list him as either "weigher" or "cityweigher."
[227] Apparently, George did not live with his wife during the last few years of his life.
[229]
Home addresses: 75 Debevoise, Brooklyn in 1872; 73 Debevoise, Brooklyn in 1873-74; 74 Debevoise, Brooklyn in 1875; 341 Broadway, Brooklyn in 1876; 702 Monroe, Brooklyn in 1877-78; 675 Madison Street, Brooklyn in 1879; 676 Madison Street,
Brooklyn in 1880-81; 573½ Kosciusko Street, Brooklyn in 1882-84; 1016 Lafayette Avenue, Brooklyn in 1886-92; 603 Macon, Brooklyn in 1893-94; 84 Ashland Place, Brooklyn in 1897-1901 (Census shows 84 Rockwell Place, Brooklyn as boarder with A.
Blass in 1900).
[231] Business addresses: 180 Pearl, New York City in 1893; 83 Pine, New York City in 1900 & 1902.