History of the Great
Lakes
Vol. 2 by J.B. Mansfield
Published Chicago:
J.H. Beers & Co. 1899
STEPHEN L. NEWNHAM
Stephen L. Newnham,
a prominent engineer sailing out of Saugatuck, Mich., is a man of many good
qualities, both of head and heart, and has the confidence and esteem of the
Marine Engineers Beneficial Association, of which he is an efficient member. He
is a charter member of Lodge No. 67 of that body, and has filled the office of
president three years, vice-president one year, and was chosen to represent his
lodge as delegate to Washington in 1896.
Mr. Newnham was
born in London, England, September 9, 1845, a son of Ricard
B. and Hannah C. (Harrison) Newnham. His parents were natives of England, the father being born in London, the mother in
Staffordshire. During his residence in London
the father was captain on the police force, and was advanced to the office of
inspector, being stationed at the Bow
street police station. In the fall of 1861 he came
to the United States,
locating first in Cleveland, Ohio,
and in that year, at the opening of the Civil war, he enlisted in the United States navy, and was assigned to a
gunboat on the Mississippi river. He took an
honorable part in the assault on Vicksburg, Miss., and was with the fleet that ran the batteries of Island No. 10, and in other important engagements in
which that fleet participated. In 1864 he accompanied Gen. Banks' expedition up
the Red river, the objects and success of
which are fully detailed in history. He was honorably discharged in 1865, at
the close of the war, and went to Saugatuck, Mich., where he purchased a plat of land, and then sent
to England for his family,
who had resided in Greenock during his absence
of four years. They arrived February 19, 1866, and proceeded to Saugatuck to
enjoy the home prepared for them, and where they still reside, the father
having passed his seventy-ninth birthday on May 24, 1898, and the mother her
eighty-first in August, of the same year. He is an ardent member of the Grand
Army of the Republic, and commander of the post in Saugatuck. He has been
justice of the peace in that city twenty-four years, school director sixteen
years, and has also filled the offices of township supervisor and township
clerk. Up to the time he retired from active life he was engaged in the shoe
business.
Stephen L. Newnham, the subject of this sketch, attened
the penny schools in London, England, and the public schools in Saugatuck, Mich. He learned the
blacksmith's trade with John Priest, serving a three-years'
apprenticeship, but in the spring of 1877 he shipped on the steamer R. C.
Britain as fireman, remaining on her two seasons. He then took out engineer's
papers and was appointed first assistant on the passenger steamer G. P. Heath,
filling this position on her two seasons. This was followed by a season on the
steamer Mary Groh as second. In the spring of 1882 he was appointed chief
engineer of the G. P. Heath, plying between Saugatuck and Chicago. In 1885 the
Heath was put on the route between White
Lake, Muskegon and other ports; in the fall of that
year she went ashore on the beach south of Saugatuck and sunk, nothing being
visible but her smokestacks. In 1886 Mr. Newnham put
machinery into the freight steamer H. A. Root, owned by the same company, and
engineered her until 1892, when he was made chief of the passenger steamer H.
W. Williams, plying between South Haven and Chicago. During the three years he
was in the employ of the H. W. Williams Transportation Company he was chief
engineer of the fleet. In the spring of 1895 he was appointed chief engineer of
the steamer M. T. Green, and the next season he brought out new the passenger
steamer Bon Ami, and was with her until the close of the second season, when he
took the steamer Edwin S. Tice, remaining chief of her up to 1898. He has
twenty issues of license.
Of the other members of the Newnham family, John is still living in England. He served seven years in
the Clyde shipyards, and learned all branches
of the ship and engine-building industry, after which he passed alloted time in the school ship Hoagley
to prove that he could put into practical use what he had learned. He is now
carrying on as business partner in a bell foundry. Lucy married Capt. Edwin
Crossman, an officer in the British Merchant machine, who sailed the
full-rigged ship Columbia.
Charlotte, unmarried is living in London with her sister.
Mary Ann married Philip Frost, a merchant in London. Richard L. is an
attorney-at-law in Grand Rapids, Mich., and assistant United States district attorney for the Northern
District of Michigan.
He is a graduate of the Ypsilanti
Academy. Elisabeth is the
widow of Joseph G. Ainsley, formerly a school teacher
and graduate of the Saugatuck high school. Maria A. is principle of a public
school in Hastings, Nebraska.
On December 6, 1879, Stephen L. Newnham was married to Miss Althea, daughter of Amos and
Margaret A. (Geneve) Deming; and the children born to
this union are Amos Wayne, Bessie L., Hazel Frances, Harry Waterman, and
Richard B. The family residence is in Saugatuck,
Michigan.