See also

Alexander ELLIS ( - )

1 Alexander ELLIS III1 ( - ) [10161].

2 Alexander ELLIS , Jr.2 (c. 1922-1989) [10144]. Born c. 1922.1 Died 29 Dec 1989, Boston, MA.1

From the New York Times.

December 30, 1989 - "BOSTON, Dec 29 (AP) -- Alexander Ellis 2nd, brother-in-law of President Bush and a prominent businessman here, died Friday of a stroke. He was 67 years old.
Mr. Ellis was married to Nancy Walker Bush Ellis.
Mr. Ellis's father founded Fairfield and Ellis, and insurance concern. Mr. Ellis joined his father's firm an became president in the late 1960's and chief executive officer in 1975.
In addition to his wife, his survivors include three sons, Alexander 3d, John Prescott and Josiah Wear; a daughter. Nancy Walker Ellis Black, and four grandchildren.".

3 Nancy BUSH2,3,4 (c. 1926- ) [10139]. Born c. 1926, NY.3

6 Prescott Sheldon BUSH2,3,5,6 (1895-1972) [4368]. Born 15 May 1895, Columbus, OH.2,5 Marr Dorothy WALKER 6 Aug 1921, Kennebunkport, ME.6 Died 8 Oct 1972, New York City, NY.2,5

From the Lima News (Lima, OH).

October 9, 1972 - "Father of U.N. Ambassador Dies. By ASSOCIATED PRESS.
PRESCOTT Sheldon Bush, former U.S. senator from Connecticut and the father of George Bush, U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, is dead at 77.
Bush died Sunday at the Memorial Hospital for Cancer and Allied Diseases in New York. He lived in Greenwich, Conn.
A staunch Republican, Bush served in the Senate from 1952 to 1963 and gained a reputation as an authority on government finance and the national economy. He was a confidant of President Dwight D. Eisenhower.
As a member of the Senate's Public Works Committee, he helped draft the Federal Aid Highway Act of 1956 which authorized the construction of the national interstate highway system.
In Washington, President Nixon issued a statement saying that in Bush's death "the nation lost a citizen of exceptional honor and integrity.
Before and after his years in the Senate, Bush was a full partner in the Wall Street Investment firm of Brown Brothers Harriman & Co.
Bush was born in Columbus, Ohio, and graduated from Yale in 1917. He married the former Dorothy Walker in 1921.".

12 Samuel Prescott BUSH5,7,8,9 (1864-1948) [4366]. Born 13 Oct 1864, NJ.5,7,8,9 Died 8 Feb 1948, Columbus, OH.5,9

From the New York Times, February 9, 1948.

SAMUEL P. BUSH, 83, A STEEL EXECUTIVE - Ex-Head of Buckeye Casting Co. Succumbs in Ohio - Once on War Industries Board.

COLUMBUS, Ohio, Feb 8 (AP) - Samuel Prescott Bush, retired industrialist and chairman of the first war chest drive in 1914, died today in the University Hospital at the age of 83. For many years he was a member of the National Association of Manufacturers' executive committee, and he was first president of the Ohio Tax League.
Mr. Bush was president for twenty-two years, until his retirement in 1928, of the Buckeye Steel Casting Company of Columbus. Previously, for eighteen years, he had been with the Pennsylvania Railroad as a superintendent of motive power. He retired a year ago as a director of the Norfolk & Western Railroad.
In 1931 Mr. Bush was a member of the commission appointed by President Hoover to deal with problems of business and unemployment relief.
In the first World War, he was on the War Industries Board, of which Bernard M. Baruch was chairman, and he was closely associated with Mr. Baruch in later years.
Born on Staten Island, on Oct. 13, 1864, Mr. Bush was the son of the late Rev. James Smith Bush, a Protestant Episcopal minister, and the late Harriet Fay Bush of Boston. He was graduated in 1884 from the Stevens Institute of Technology in Hoboken, from which he received an honorary degree of Doctor of Engineering in 1947.
Mr. Bush had been an Elk and a member of the University and Engineers Clubs of New York. At one time he was a director of the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland.
After the death in 1920 of his first wife, the former Flora Sheldon of Columbus, he married Martha Bell Carter of Milwaukee.
Besides his widow, he leaves two sons, James S. of St. Louis, and Prescott S. Bush of New York and Greenwich, Conn., who is with Brown Brothers, Harriman & Co., and two daughters, Mrs. Frank E. House Jr., and Mrs. Stewart H. Clement of New Haven, Conn.

Note: Both the 1920 and 1930 OH census state that Samuel was born in New Jersey, not Staten Island as reported in the obituary.

13 Flora SHELDON5,8 (1872-1920) [4367]. Born 1872, OH.5,8 Died 4 Sep 1920, Westerly, RI.5,10,11 Cause: Automobile accident.

From the Lexington Herald (Lexington, KY)

September 15, 1920 - "WESTERLY, R.I., Sept 14 -- The death of Mrs Samuel Prescott Bush, of Columbus, O., a wealthy summer resident killed by and automobile at Watch Hill September 4, was due to criminal negligence, Coroner Everett A. Kingsley reported today. Herbert Davis of Mystc, Conn., a broker, is held in bonds of $3,000 on charges of manslaughter in connection with the death. Mrs. Bush's husband is president of the Buckeye Steel Company.".

7 Dorothy WALKER3,5,6 (1901-1992) [4369]. Born 1 Jul 1901, Kennebunkport ME.3,4,5 Died 19 Nov 1992, Greenwich, CT.4

From the New York Times.

August 7, 1921 - "Bush - Walker. Special to the New York Times.
KENNEBUNKPORT, Me., Aug. 6. - The wedding of Miss Dorothy Walker, a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. G. Herbert Walker of New York, formerly of St. Louis, and Prescott S. Bush, formerly of Columbus, Ohio, was celebrated here today by Bishop Tyler of North Dakota. The brides attendants were the Misses Isabel Rockefeller, Hope Lincoln and Mary Keck of New York, Elizabeth Trotter of Philadelphia, Martha Pittman and Ruth Lionberger of St. Louis. Her sister, Miss Nancy Walker, was her maid of honor.
James S. Bush was his brother's best man and the ushers were Knight Wooley and Frank Shepard of New York, John Shepley of St. Louis, Richard Bentley and Henry Isham of Chicago, William Potter Wear of Philadelphia, Henry Fennimore Cooper of St. Louis and G. H. Walker Jr. of New York.
A large reception was held at Surf Lodge, the Summer home of the bride's parents."

November 20, 1992 - "Dorothy W. Bush, Mother of President, Dies at 91.

Dorothy Walker Bush, the mother of President Bush, died shortly after 5 P.M. yesterday at the family's house in Greenwich, Conn., after suffering a stroke. She was 91 years old.
Mrs Bush died barely five hours after president Bush returned to Washington from Greenwich, where he had flown early today with his daughter, Dorothy Koch, to be at his mother's bedside.
The President had slipped quietly from Washington at 8:35 A.M. today for the trip to Greenwich, traveling on a small Air Force C-20 jet and in an eight-car motorcade instead of in a Boeing 747 and with the retinue of aides and Secret Service agents that normally accompany him on every trip out of town. He returned to the White House at 12:55 P.M. and made no public appearances for the rest of the day.
Barbara Bush did not accompany her husband to Connecticut but stayed in Washington to greet President-elect Bill Clinton's wife, Hillary, and to attend to ceremonial duties.
The White House said that Mr. Bush was told by telephone of his mother's death by his sister, Nancy Ellis of Lincoln, Mass., immediately after it occurred. Both he and Barbara Bush will attend funeral services Monday morning in Greenwich, aides said.
A few hours after Mrs. Bush died, Mr. Clinton called the President to offer his condolences, Mr. Clinton's office said "She was a remarkable woman, whom Hillary, Chelsea and I had the good fortune to meet in Maine several years ago," Mr. Clinton said, adding that the Bush family is "in our thoughts and prayers."
Mr. Bush has described his mother as instilling in him a sense of competitiveness and of loyalty. Most of all, he said, she taught him not to take himself too seriously. She was a disciplinarian who took pains to see that her children were not spoiled, despite the family's good fortune. Family values, he said, included a sense of social service and an abhorrence of self-aggrandizement.
Mrs. Bush also reared her children in a strongly religious home, a reflection of the own childhood during which she is said to have attended church as many a three times every Sunday.
While George Bush was Vice President, Barbara Bush said in an interview that her mother-in-law "had 10 times more" influence on her son than his father did.
When Mr. Bush took a vacation in Florida after his election to the Presidency in 1988, he put his arm around his mother and told reporters, "I just came to get my instructions from the head of the family here on how to do my job." Atmosphere of Privilege.
She was born Dorothy Walker in Kennebunkport, Me., on July 1, 1901, the daughter of Loulie Wear Walker and George Herbert Walker. The Walker family had emigrated from England to America in the 17th century, and settled in Maine. By the middle of the 19th century, they had migrated to St. Louis where Dorothy Walker's father became a thriving businessman.
Her father was a banker who established the Walker Cup, which pits British and American amateur golfers. Her father and grandfather established a summer home for the family about 1905 on Walker's Point in Kennebunkport, in a rambling waterfront house that now serves as the vacation White House.
Mrs. Bush grew up in an atmosphere of privilege in St. Louis. She also attended the Farmington School Academy, a prep school in Farmington, Conn. Described in her youth as beautiful and vivacious, with an infectious laugh, she was an avid tennis player, an excellent golfer and a strong swimmer.
In 1921, Dorothy Walker married Prescott Bush, an investment banker, at the Church of St. Ann in Kennebunkport, not far from her family's summer house. The couple moved to Tennessee and then Massachusetts where George Bush, the future President, was born in 1924. She named her second son after her father, and when young George married Barbara Pierce in 1945, the bride wore her mother-in-laws wedding veil of princess and rosepoint lace.
During the President's childhood, Mrs. Bush was active in Greenwich public affairs, doing work for the Red Cross and a local welfare agency. Her husband, a partner in the Wall Street firm of Brown Brothers, Harriman & Company, also served as Republican Senator from Connecticut from 1952 to 1963. He died in 1972.
In addition to the house in Kennebunkport, she kept homes in Greenwich, where the President spent his boyhood, and on Jupiter Island in Florida for winter vacations.
In addition to the President and her daughter, she is survived by three sons, Prescott Bush Jr. of Greenwich, Jonathan Bush of Manhattan and William Bush of St. Louis, and many grandchildren and great-grandchildren.

Correction: November 21, 1992, Saturday.

An obituary yesterday about Dorothy W. Bush, the mother of the President, misstated the day the President traveled from Washington to Greenwich, Conn to visit her and day he returned to Washington. It was Thursday.".

14 George Herbert WALKER4,6 ( - ) [10140].

15 Loulie WEAR4 ( - ) [10146].

Sources

1"Obituary of Alexander Ellis, Jr. in the New York Times, December 30, 1989".
2"Obituary of Prescott Sheldon Bush in the New York Times, October 9, 1972".
3"1930 CT, Fairfield, Greenwich census".
4"Obituary of Dorothy Walker Bush in the New York Times, November 20, 1992".
5"Information provided by Jeffery H. Lloyd".
6"Wedding announcement of Dorothy Walker and Prescott S. Bush in the New York Timnes, August 7, 1921".
7"1930 OH, Franklin, Columbus census".
8"1920 OH, Franklin, Franklin census".
9"Obituary of Samuel Prescott Bush in the New York Times, February 9, 1948".
10"Death notice of Mrs. Flora Sheldon Bush in the Idaho Statesman (Boise, ID), September 15, 1920".
11"Death notice of Flora Sheldon Bush in the Lexington Herald (Lexington, KY), September 15, 1920".